Literature DB >> 19713300

Nicotine enhances but does not normalize visual sustained attention and the associated brain network in schizophrenia.

L Elliot Hong1, Matthew Schroeder, Thomas J Ross, Brittany Buchholz, Betty Jo Salmeron, Ikwunga Wonodi, Gunvant K Thaker, Elliot A Stein.   

Abstract

Sustained attention abnormality in schizophrenia is usually refractory to available treatment. Nicotine can transiently improve sustained attention in schizophrenia patients, although its neural mechanisms are unknown. Understanding the neural basis of this effect may lead to new treatment strategies for this cognitive deficit. Twenty schizophrenia patients and 24 healthy comparison smokers participated in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover, randomized functional magnetic resonance imaging study comparing nicotine vs placebo patch on sustained attention, using the rapid visual information-processing task. Schizophrenia patients had impaired visual sustained attention accuracy and processing speed (all P's <.001) and showed significantly reduced activation in the frontal-parietal-cingulate-thalamic attention network compared with healthy comparison subjects. Nicotine administration enhanced accuracy and processing speed compared with placebo (all P's ≤.006), with no drug × diagnosis interactions. However, schizophrenia patients' task performance remained impaired during the nicotine condition, even when compared with healthy comparison subjects in the placebo condition (all P's ≤.01). Nicotine exerted no significant reversal of the impaired attention network associated with schizophrenia. Activations in brain regions associated with nicotine-induced behavioral improvement were not significantly different between patients and comparison subjects. Thus, nicotine transiently enhanced sustained attention similarly in schizophrenia patients and in healthy comparison smokers. The neural mechanisms for this nicotinic effect in schizophrenia appear similar to those for healthy comparison subjects. However, nicotine, at least in a single sustained dose, does not normalize impaired sustained attention and its associated brain network in schizophrenia. These findings provide guidance for developing new treatment strategies for the sustained attention deficit in schizophrenia.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19713300      PMCID: PMC3044635          DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbp089

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Schizophr Bull        ISSN: 0586-7614            Impact factor:   9.306


  45 in total

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2.  Impaired attention as an endophenotype for molecular genetic studies of schizophrenia.

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3.  Cognitive mechanisms of nicotine on visual attention.

Authors:  Natalia S Lawrence; Thomas J Ross; Elliot A Stein
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2002-10-24       Impact factor: 17.173

4.  Nicotine and behavioral markers of risk for schizophrenia: a double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over study.

Authors:  Lana Dépatie; Gillian A O'Driscoll; Anne-Lise V Holahan; Victoria Atkinson; Joseph X Thavundayil; N Ng Ying Kin; Samarthji Lal
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 7.853

Review 5.  Effects of nicotinic stimulation on cognitive performance.

Authors:  Paul A Newhouse; Alexandra Potter; Abhay Singh
Journal:  Curr Opin Pharmacol       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 5.547

6.  Multiple neuronal networks mediate sustained attention.

Authors:  Natalia S Lawrence; Thomas J Ross; Ray Hoffmann; Hugh Garavan; Elliot A Stein
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Authors:  Jay D Sherr; Carol Myers; Matthew T Avila; Amie Elliott; Teresa A Blaxton; Gunvant K Thaker
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8.  Attention-related activity during episodic memory retrieval: a cross-function fMRI study.

Authors:  Roberto Cabeza; Florin Dolcos; Steven E Prince; Heather J Rice; Daniel H Weissman; Lars Nyberg
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9.  Effects of cigarette smoking and nicotine nasal spray on psychiatric symptoms and cognition in schizophrenia.

Authors:  Robert C Smith; Abhay Singh; Mauricio Infante; Amaresh Khandat; Angelica Kloos
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 7.853

Review 10.  Nicotinic treatment for cognitive dysfunction.

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Journal:  Curr Drug Targets CNS Neurol Disord       Date:  2002-08
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  29 in total

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Review 2.  Spontaneous object recognition and its relevance to schizophrenia: a review of findings from pharmacological, genetic, lesion and developmental rodent models.

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3.  Smoking withdrawal shifts the spatiotemporal dynamics of neurocognition.

Authors:  Rachel V Kozink; Avery M Lutz; Jed E Rose; Brett Froeliger; F Joseph McClernon
Journal:  Addict Biol       Date:  2010-10       Impact factor: 4.280

4.  Nicotine-induced activation of caudate and anterior cingulate cortex in response to errors in schizophrenia.

Authors:  Lauren V Moran; Luke E Stoeckel; Kristina Wang; Carolyn E Caine; Rosemond Villafuerte; Vanessa Calderon; Justin T Baker; Dost Ongur; Amy C Janes; A Eden Evins; Diego A Pizzagalli
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5.  Preservation Effect: Cigarette Smoking Acts on the Dynamic of Influences Among Unifying Neuropsychiatric Triple Networks in Schizophrenia.

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Review 6.  Cholinergic modulation of cognition: insights from human pharmacological functional neuroimaging.

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Review 7.  Functional brain imaging of nicotinic effects on higher cognitive processes.

Authors:  Paul A Newhouse; Alexandra S Potter; Julie A Dumas; Christiane M Thiel
Journal:  Biochem Pharmacol       Date:  2011-06-13       Impact factor: 5.858

8.  Prefrontal Cortical Inactivations Decrease Willingness to Expend Cognitive Effort on a Rodent Cost/Benefit Decision-Making Task.

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Review 9.  Targeting neuronal dysfunction in schizophrenia with nicotine: Evidence from neurophysiology to neuroimaging.

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10.  Disruption of anterior insula modulation of large-scale brain networks in schizophrenia.

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Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2013-04-25       Impact factor: 13.382

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