Imaging Studies Elucidate Neurobiology of Cigarette Craving
January 21st, 2009 | Published by BRAHA Editor in For Health Professionals, Medicine & Health
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Researchers observe brain circuit activation, rapid receptor occupation.
BY LORI WHITTEN,
NIDANotes Staff Writer
One difference between a smoker and an ex-smoker is that the latter has successfully overcome cravings for tobacco. To learn how people achieve this feat, NIDA-funded researcher Dr. Arthur Brody has been looking inside the brains of would-be quitters. His findings, based on three separate imaging studies, indicate that when smokers actively resist cravings, they engage brain areas that focus attention and regulate emotion; that heavy smokers can stave off craving only by keeping virtually all nicotinic receptors in the brain filled; and that nicotine is the only component of cigarette smoke that occupies these receptors.
To be continued…
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