By

Tanya Lewis /

Livescience.com/ January 29, 2013, 2:59 PM

Brain circuitry behind cigarette cravings revealed

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Addiction to cigarettes and other drugs may result from abnormal wiring in the brain's frontal cortex, an area critical for self-control, a new study finds.

Drug cravings can be brought on by many factors, such as the sight of drugs, drug availability and lack of self-control. Now, researchers have uncovered some of the neural mechanisms involved in cigarette craving. Two brain areas, the orbitofrontal cortex and the prefrontal cortex, interact to turn cravings on or off depending on whether drugs are available, the study reports Tuesday in the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The researchers scanned the brains of 10 moderate-to-heavy smokers using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which measures brain activity by changes in blood flow. Researchers measured activity while the participants watched video clips of people smoking as well as neutral videos. Before viewing, some subjects were told cigarettes would be available immediately after the experiment, while others were told they would have to wait 4 hours before lighting up.

When participants watched the smoking videos, their brains showed increased activity in the medial orbitofrontal cortex, a brain area that assigns value to a behavior. When the cigarettes were available immediately as opposed to hours later, smokers reported greater cravings and their brains showed more activity in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. The researchers hypothesize that this area modulates value. In other words, it can turns up or down the "value level" of cigarettes (or other rewards) in the first area, the medial orbitofrontal cortex. The results show that addiction involves a brain circuit important for self-control and decision-making.

Prior to some of the scans, study participants were exposed to transcranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS. This non-invasive method excites or blocks neural activity by inducing weak electrical currents in a particular region of the brain. When the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was deactivated using TMS, there was no difference in brain activity between those who watched the smoking clips and those who watched neutral videos; those two groups also reported similarly low cravings for cigarettes.

The blocking of this brain region cut off the link between craving and awareness of cigarette availability, suggesting that suppressing the area could reduce cravings brought on by impending access to the drug.

"This is something that we've all been working on, trying to find the target in the brain that you could hit and cause somebody to stop smoking," study researcher Antoine Bechara, a neuroscientist at the University of Southern California, told LiveScience.

Scientists will quibble over the exact brain areas that are the most important targets, Bechara said, but he thinks transcranial magnetic stimulation is a useful approach. "It gives hope to be able, in a noninvasive manner, to help people quit smoking," Bechara added.

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TongMushu says:
I agree with BLUEGRASSGUITAR...I'd did 60 days of time in Sheriff Crabtree's jail, and by the 2nd day the urge to smoke had left me. In fact had no issues with the lack of an option to.

Though immediately upon my release the urge to smoke hit me like a sledge hammer blow to the fore head.
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Bojax39 says:
"Addiction to cigarettes and other drugs may result from abnormal wiring in the brain's frontal cortex"

I wonder what the results would be if tried on former smokers. Would the faulty "wiring" in the brain correct itself over time?

This would need to be done with former smokers who didn't simply replace their tobacco addiction with another.

It might tell us if addiction happens because of abnormal wiring or the abnormality occurs as a result of addiction.
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bluegrassguitar says:
I think the article has hit upon the truth. Before I quit smoking, I could fly coast-to-coast and even internationally and never wanted a cigarette during the flight because they were not available. When I landed, though....
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bluegrassguitar says:
I think the article has hit upon the truth. Before I quit smoking, I could fly coast-to-coast and even internationally and never wanted a cigarette during the flight because they were not available. When I landed, though....
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nubwaxer says:
i don't think you ever quit smoking but it's like alcoholism--one day at a time. i quit 18 months ago and not a day goes by i don't feel an urge for a cigarette. smoking is a very evil addiction.
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MaxK341 says:
Cravings for cigarettes, alcohol, drugs or food do not originate in the brain. The cravings originate in the bloodstream and the brain just passes the message along. The article insinuates that cravings may be due to lack of self control. That's rediculous. When addictive substances have been introduced into the body it is processed by the liver. Then when the concentration of the substance becomes low; the brain is signaled to want more to satisfy the bodies craving.
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bajajohn1 says:
An area that governs self-control...interesting. Guess this shows why some people need to have their hands occupied or they will hurt themselves.
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willow11st says:
What brain circuitry?? I just read where a couple of idiots were severely burned by lighting up too close to a source of oil AT A REFINERY!!Dope,dope, dope,dope-dee-dope dope!!!...
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