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Enhanced corticobulbar excitability in chronic smokers during visual exposure to cigarette smoking cues

Citation

Vicario, CM and Komeilipoor, N and Cesari, P and Rafal, RD and Nitsche, MA, Enhanced corticobulbar excitability in chronic smokers during visual exposure to cigarette smoking cues, Journal of psychiatry & neuroscience, 39, (4) pp. 232-238. ISSN 1180-4882 (2014) [Refereed Article]

Copyright Statement

© 2014 Canadian Medical Association

DOI: doi:10.1503/jpn.130086

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Neuroimaging studies of chronic smokers report altered activity of several neural regions involved in the processing of rewarding outcomes. Neuroanatomical evidence suggests that these regions are directly connected to the tongue muscle through the corticobulbar pathways. Accordingly, we examined whether corticobulbar excitability might be considered a somatic marker for nicotine craving.

METHODS: We compared motor-evoked potential (MEP) amplitudes recorded from the tongue and the extensor carpi radialis (control muscle) of chronic smokers under drug withdrawal and intake conditions as well as a nonsmoker group. All participants were tested during passive exposure to pictures showing a smoking cue or a meaningless stimulus. In the intake condition, chronic smokers were asked to smoke a real cigarette (CSn: group 1) or a placebo (CSp: group 2).

RESULTS: Results show that MEP amplitudes recorded from the tongues of participants in the CSn and CSp groups under the withdrawal condition were selectively enhanced during exposure to a smoking cue. However, this effect on tongue MEP amplitudes disappeared in the intake condition for both the CSn and CSp groups.

LIMITATIONS: Limitations include the fact that the study was conducted in 2 different laboratories, the small sample size, the absence of data on chronic smoker craving strength and the different tastes of the real and placebo cigarettes.

CONCLUSION: These results suggest that, in chronic smokers, tongue muscle MEP amplitudes are sensitive to neural processes active under the physiological status of nicotine craving. This finding implicates a possible functional link between neural excitability of the corticobulbar pathway and the reward system in chronic smokers.

Item Details

Item Type:Refereed Article
Keywords:Addiction, Motor Cortex
Research Division:Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Research Group:Neurosciences
Research Field:Neurosciences not elsewhere classified
Objective Division:Expanding Knowledge
Objective Group:Expanding knowledge
Objective Field:Expanding knowledge in psychology
UTAS Author:Vicario, CM (Dr Carmelo Vicario)
ID Code:115994
Year Published:2014
Web of Science® Times Cited:13
Deposited By:Psychology
Deposited On:2017-04-26
Last Modified:2017-11-06
Downloads:0

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