Smoking Cigarettes Affects Brain Like Heroin
Smoking Cigarettes Affects Brain Like Heroin
Heroin, Morphine, Nicotine Affect 'Feel-Good' Brain Chemicals in Similar Way
Oct. 27, 2004 -- Just like heroin and morphine, smoking cigarettes triggers the release of addictive "feel-good" brain chemicals, new research shows.
The finding helps researchers understand why smokers have such a tough time quitting despite all the health dangers. They presented their report at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, held this week in San Diego.
It's the first human study to show that smoking cigarettes stimulates the brain's production of chemicals called opioids. The opioids are known to play a role in soothing pain, increasing positive emotions, and creating a sense of reward. Both morphine and heroin trigger this same chemical flow.
The new study also confirms previous findings -- from animal studies -- that smoking cigarettes affects the flow of another feel-good brain chemical called dopamine. Researchers are now investigating the interaction between the two chemicals in the brains of smokers and nonsmokers.
"It appears that smokers have an altered opioid flow all the time, when compared with non-smokers, and that smoking a cigarette further alters that flow by 20 to 30 percent in regions of the brain important to emotions and craving," says lead researcher David J. Scott, a graduate student in neuroscience at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, in a news release.
13 Best Quit-Smoking Tips Ever
Scott's research team spent several years testing a way of using PET imaging (positive emission tomography) to study the opioid system in the brain. The scans don't show the flow of opioids directly, but they do show opioid receptor activity in the brain.
Morphine and heroin are among the drugs that bind to these receptors.
The University of Michigan researchers have also created a system that allows someone to smoke cigarettes while lying in the PET scanner having his or her brain scanned.
That's how they conducted this new study, which involved six healthy men who smoked one pack per day. All refrained from smoking cigarettes for at least 10 hours before the study began. During their brain scans, each first smoked a cigarette almost devoid of nicotine, and then smoked a regular cigarette.
Smoking Cigarettes Affects Brain Like Heroin
Heroin, Morphine, Nicotine Affect 'Feel-Good' Brain Chemicals in Similar Way
Oct. 27, 2004 -- Just like heroin and morphine, smoking cigarettes triggers the release of addictive "feel-good" brain chemicals, new research shows.
The finding helps researchers understand why smokers have such a tough time quitting despite all the health dangers. They presented their report at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, held this week in San Diego.
It's the first human study to show that smoking cigarettes stimulates the brain's production of chemicals called opioids. The opioids are known to play a role in soothing pain, increasing positive emotions, and creating a sense of reward. Both morphine and heroin trigger this same chemical flow.
The new study also confirms previous findings -- from animal studies -- that smoking cigarettes affects the flow of another feel-good brain chemical called dopamine. Researchers are now investigating the interaction between the two chemicals in the brains of smokers and nonsmokers.
"It appears that smokers have an altered opioid flow all the time, when compared with non-smokers, and that smoking a cigarette further alters that flow by 20 to 30 percent in regions of the brain important to emotions and craving," says lead researcher David J. Scott, a graduate student in neuroscience at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, in a news release.
13 Best Quit-Smoking Tips Ever
Smoking Cigarettes During Brain Scans
Scott's research team spent several years testing a way of using PET imaging (positive emission tomography) to study the opioid system in the brain. The scans don't show the flow of opioids directly, but they do show opioid receptor activity in the brain.
Morphine and heroin are among the drugs that bind to these receptors.
The University of Michigan researchers have also created a system that allows someone to smoke cigarettes while lying in the PET scanner having his or her brain scanned.
That's how they conducted this new study, which involved six healthy men who smoked one pack per day. All refrained from smoking cigarettes for at least 10 hours before the study began. During their brain scans, each first smoked a cigarette almost devoid of nicotine, and then smoked a regular cigarette.