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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors examined whether smoking while wearing a transdermal nicotine patch over 32 h was well-tolerated and led to smoking suppression in heavy smokers with
schizophrenia
. In a crossover design, 10 male veteran smokers with
schizophrenia
were admitted for two brief inpatient stays to smoke while wearing a transdermal nicotine or placebo patch. Carbon monoxide in expired air, self-reported cigarettes per day, nicotine plasma levels, and psychiatric ratings were measured. Nicotine levels increased during active patch treatment, without evidence of nicotine toxicity. Psychiatric symptoms, carbon monoxide and cigarettes per day did not change, although eight subjects had a decrease in expired carbon monoxide on the active patch. Dyskinesias showed a small, but significant, increase during smoking plus active patch. The heaviest smokers (identified by placebo phase nicotine plasma level or CO level above group median; n = 5) had a statistically significant decrease in expired carbon monoxide of at least 20%. Smoking while wearing the nicotine patch over 32 h was well tolerated. Significant decreases in carbon monoxide smoking indices were seen for the heaviest smokers. These findings suggest further investigation of a smoking reduction intervention in this population.
Nicotine
Tob
Res 1999 Mar
PMID:Acute feasibility and safety of a smoking reduction strategy for smokers with schizophrenia. 1107 88
The neurobiology of nicotine addiction is reviewed within the context of neurobiological and behavioral theories postulated for other drugs of abuse. The roles of various neurotransmitter systems, including acetylcholine, dopamine, serotonin, glutamate, gamma-aminobutyric acid, and opioid peptides in acute nicotine reinforcement and withdrawal from chronic administration are examined followed by a discussion of potential neuroadaptations within these neurochemical systems that may lead to the development of nicotine dependence. The link between nicotine administration, depression and
schizophrenia
are also discussed. Finally, a theoretical model of the neurobiological mechanisms underlying acute nicotine withdrawal and protracted abstinence involves alterations within dopaminergic, serotonergic, and stress systems that are hypothesized to contribute to the negative affective state associated with nicotine abstinence.
Nicotine
Tob
Res 2000 Feb
PMID:Neural mechanisms underlying nicotine addiction: acute positive reinforcement and withdrawal. 1107 38
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of adding sustained-release (SR) bupropion to cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) on smoking behavior and stability of psychiatric symptoms in patients with
schizophrenia
. We conducted a 3-month, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of bupropion SR, 150 mg/day, added to a concurrent CBT program with 3-month follow-up in 19 stable outpatients with
schizophrenia
who wanted to quit smoking. Eighteen subjects completed the trial. Bupropion treatment was associated with significantly greater reduction in smoking, as measured by self-report verified by expired-air carbon monoxide (6/9 subjects, 66%), than placebo (1/9 subjects, 11%) during the 3-month active treatment period and the 3-month follow-up period. One subject in the bupropion group (11%) and no subjects in the placebo group achieved sustained tobacco abstinence for the 6-month trial. Bupropion treatment was associated with improvement in negative symptoms and greater stability of psychotic and depressive symptoms, compared with placebo, during the quit attempt. Subjects in the bupropion group experienced significant weight loss, compared with those on placebo during the smoking cessation attempt. These data suggest that bupropion SR, 150 mg/day, combined with CBT, may facilitate smoking reduction in patients with
schizophrenia
while stabilizing psychiatric symptoms during a quit attempt.
Nicotine
Tob
Res 2001 Nov
PMID:A pilot trial of bupropion added to cognitive behavioral therapy for smoking cessation in schizophrenia. 1169 8
The prevalence of smoking is high among people with
schizophrenia
. Although several research groups are developing smoking treatments for these smokers, abstinence rates to date have been modest. Methodological tools such as cue exposure are useful in clinical research with smokers in general, but the value of these paradigms with smokers with
schizophrenia
has yet to be established. The aim of the present study was to determine the subjective and physiological effects of exposure to in vivo smoking cues in smokers with
schizophrenia
. A total of 25 heavy smokers with
schizophrenia
or schizoaffective disorder were assessed while nonabstinent and after 2-hr smoking abstinence. Urge to smoke, mood, nicotine withdrawal symptoms, heart rate, and blood pressure were measured during a precue relaxation period, after exposure to neutral cues, and after exposure to smoking cues. Results indicate that both exposure to smoking cues and brief abstinence increased urge levels, nicotine withdrawal symptom levels, and negative affect. Abstinence did not amplify the effects of cues on urges or other cue reactivity measures. These results indicate that smoking cue reactivity laboratory models may be useful for investigating potential smoking treatments for, or neurobiological contributions to, smoking behavior in smokers with
schizophrenia
.
Nicotine
Tob
Res 2005 Jun
PMID:Subjective and physiological responses to smoking cues in smokers with schizophrenia. 1608 10
This study examined whether smoking menthol cigarettes was associated with increased biochemical measures of smoke intake. Expired carbon monoxide (CO) and serum nicotine and cotinine were measured in 89 smokers with
schizophrenia
and 53 control smokers immediately after smoking an afternoon cigarette. Serum nicotine levels (27 vs. 22 ng/ml, p = .010), serum cotinine levels (294 vs. 240 ng/ml, p = .041), and expired CO (25 vs. 21 ppm, p = .029) were higher in smokers of menthol compared with nonmenthol cigarettes, with no differences in 3-hydroxycotinine/cotinine ratios between groups when controlling for race. Backward stepwise linear regression models showed that, in addition to having a diagnosis of
schizophrenia
, smoking menthol cigarettes was a significant predictor of nicotine and cotinine levels. Individuals with
schizophrenia
or schizoaffective disorder smoked more generic or discount value brands (Basic, Doral, Monarch, USA, Wave, others) compared with control smokers (28% vs. 6%, p = .002) but did not smoke more brands with high nicotine delivery as estimated by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission method. Although rates of mentholated cigarette smoking were not higher in smokers with
schizophrenia
overall, they were significantly higher in non-Hispanic White people with
schizophrenia
compared with controls of the same ethnic/racial subgroup (51% vs. 28%, p<.0001). The higher exhaled CO in menthol smokers suggests that the higher nicotine levels are at least partly related to increased intake of smoke from menthol cigarettes, although menthol-mediated inhibition of nicotine metabolism also may be a factor. Menthol is an important cigarette additive that may help explain why some groups have lower quit rates and more smoking-caused disease.
Nicotine
Tob
Res 2007 Aug
PMID:Higher nicotine and carbon monoxide levels in menthol cigarette smokers with and without schizophrenia. 1765
The mechanisms underlying the low smoking cessation rates among smokers with
schizophrenia
(SS) are unknown. In this laboratory study, we compared the responses of 21 SS and 21 non-psychiatric controls (CS) to manipulations of 5-hour smoking abstinence, transdermal nicotine replacement (0 mg, 21 mg and 42 mg), and in vivo smoking cues. Results indicate that SS were more sensitive than CS to the effects of acute abstinence on carbon monoxide (CO) boost, but not more sensitive to the effects of abstinence on urge levels or withdrawal symptoms. SS and CS did not differ in urge response to in vivo smoking cues, but SS were less consistent in their reactions. These findings suggest that heightened sensitivity to the effects of abstinence on smoke intake may partially account for the low cessation rates experienced by SS, but other potential mechanisms should be explored using behavioral laboratory models.
Nicotine
Tob
Res 2008 Jun
PMID:Effects of smoking abstinence, smoking cues and nicotine replacement in smokers with schizophrenia and controls. 1858 68
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) convened a meeting in September 2005 to review tobacco use and dependence and smoking cessation among those with mental disorders, especially individuals with anxiety disorders, depression, or
schizophrenia
. Smoking rates are exceptionally high among these individuals and contribute to the high rates of medical morbidity and mortality in these individuals. Numerous biological, psychological, and social factors may explain these high smoking rates, including the lack of smoking cessation treatment in mental health settings. Historically, "self-medication" and "individual rights" have been concerns used to rationalize allowing ongoing tobacco use and limited smoking cessation efforts in many mental health treatment settings. Although research has shown that tobacco use can reduce or ameliorate certain psychiatric symptoms, overreliance on the self-medication hypothesis to explain the high rates of tobacco use in psychiatric populations may result in inadequate attention to other potential explanations for this addictive behavior among those with mental disorders. A more complete understanding of nicotine and tobacco use in psychiatric patients also can lead to new psychiatric treatments and a better understanding of mental illness. Greater collaboration between mental health researchers and nicotine and tobacco researchers is needed to better understand and develop new treatments for cooccurring nicotine dependence and mental illness. Despite an accumulating literature for some specific psychiatric disorders and tobacco use and cessation, many unstudied research questions remain and are a focus and an emphasis of this review.
Nicotine
Tob
Res 2008 Dec
PMID:Tobacco use and cessation in psychiatric disorders: National Institute of Mental Health report. 1902 23
While current treatments for
schizophrenia
often provide much relief for positive symptoms such as hallucinations, other symptoms, particularly cognitive deficits, persist and contribute to substantial suffering and reduced quality of life for patients. In searching for novel therapeutic avenues to treat cognitive deficits in
schizophrenia
, recent work is exploring nicotinic receptor neurobiology. Supported by a large body of evidence, with contributions from studies of smoking behaviors, genetics, receptor distribution and function, animal models and nicotinic effects on illness symptoms, the alpha7 nicotinic receptor has emerged as a potential therapeutic target. Despite promise in early clinical trials, however, no drug targeting nicotinic systems has succeeded in larger phase 3 trials. Following a brief review of nicotinic receptor biology and the evidence that has led to pursuit of alpha7 nicotinic agonism as a therapeutic strategy, this review will provide an update on the status of recent trials, discuss potential issues that may have contributed to negative outcomes, and point to new directions and promising advances in developing alpha7 nicotinic receptor-based treatment for cognitive symptoms in
schizophrenia
.
Nicotine
Tob
Res 2019 02 18
PMID:Alpha7 Nicotinic Receptors as Therapeutic Targets in Schizophrenia. 3013 18