Environments as Smoking Cues: Imaging Brain Substrates, Developing New Treatments (CameraCue)
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Healthy Studies, Smoking Cessation |
Therapuetic Areas: | Pulmonary / Respiratory Diseases, Other |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 55 |
Updated: | 2/1/2017 |
Start Date: | December 2012 |
End Date: | July 2014 |
Environments as Smoking Cues: Imaging Brain Substrates, Developing New Treatments
The overarching goals of this proposal are to 1) identify the network of brain regions
specifically activated by personal smoking environment cues and 2) to evaluate the effects
of exposure to these cues on smoke self-administration and subjective reactivity. The
results of this study will inform the development of novel and more efficacious
cue-exposures therapies targeted at helping smokers quit smoking and will provide novel
mechanism information regarding the influence of environmental context on drug taking.
The investigator hypothesizes that cue-exposure treatments (CETs), in which drug use is
prevented during exposure to drug cues (e.g. lit cigarette) have been of limited efficacy in
part because they have not included cues representative of the contexts in which drug use
occurs. By demonstrating that context cues have a differential and robust influence on brain
and behavioral responses, we will have provided a substantial basis for including such
stimuli in the context of treatment. At the same time, we will have identified novel
mechanisms by which such stimuli promote continued drug use and relapse.
specifically activated by personal smoking environment cues and 2) to evaluate the effects
of exposure to these cues on smoke self-administration and subjective reactivity. The
results of this study will inform the development of novel and more efficacious
cue-exposures therapies targeted at helping smokers quit smoking and will provide novel
mechanism information regarding the influence of environmental context on drug taking.
The investigator hypothesizes that cue-exposure treatments (CETs), in which drug use is
prevented during exposure to drug cues (e.g. lit cigarette) have been of limited efficacy in
part because they have not included cues representative of the contexts in which drug use
occurs. By demonstrating that context cues have a differential and robust influence on brain
and behavioral responses, we will have provided a substantial basis for including such
stimuli in the context of treatment. At the same time, we will have identified novel
mechanisms by which such stimuli promote continued drug use and relapse.
Inclusion Criteria:
- generally healthy
- between the ages of 18 and 55
- smoking an average of 5 cigarettes per day for at least one year
- breath CO (carbon monoxide) level > 8 ppm (if ≤ 8 ppm, then NicAlert Strip > 2)
- no interest in quitting smoking for the duration of time required for the experiment
- right-handed as measured by a three-item scale used in our laboratory
- ability to identify 4 personal smoking and 4 personal non-smoking places
Exclusion Criteria:
- inability to attend all required experimental sessions
- significant health problems
- use of psychoactive medications
- use of smokeless tobacco
- current alcohol or drug abuse
- use of illegal drugs as measured by urine drug screen
- current use of nicotine replacement therapy or other smoking cessation treatment
- presence of conditions that would make MRI unsafe (e.g., pacemaker)
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