Literature DB >> 23081705

Effects of nicotine on social cognition, social competence and self-reported stress in schizophrenia patients and healthy controls.

Katharina Drusch1, Agnes Lowe, Katrin Fisahn, Jürgen Brinkmeyer, Francesco Musso, Arian Mobascher, Tracy Warbrick, John Shah, Christian Ohmann, Georg Winterer, Wolfgang Wölwer.   

Abstract

More than 80 % of patients diagnosed with schizophrenia are nicotine-dependent. Self-medication of cognitive deficits and an increased vulnerability to stress are discussed as promoting factors for the development of nicotine dependence. However, the effects of nicotine on social cognition and subjective stress responses in schizophrenia are largely unexplored. A 2 × 2-factorial design (drug × group) was used to investigate the effects of nicotine versus placebo in smoking schizophrenia patients and healthy controls after 24 h of abstinence from smoking. Participants performed a facial affect recognition task and a semi-standardized role-play task, after which social competence and self-reported stress during social interaction were assessed. Data analysis revealed no significant group differences in the facial affect recognition task. During social interaction, healthy controls showed more non-verbal expressions and a lower subjective stress level than schizophrenia patients. There were no significant effects of nicotine in terms of an enhanced recognition of facial affect, more expressive behaviour or reduced subjective stress during social interaction. While schizophrenia patients unexpectedly recognized facial affect not significantly worse than healthy controls, the observed group differences in subjective stress and non-verbal expression during social interaction in the role-play situation are in line with previous findings. Contrary to expectations derived from the self-medication hypothesis, nicotine showed no significant effects on the dependent variables, perhaps because of the dosage used and the delay between the administration of nicotine and the performance of the role-play.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23081705     DOI: 10.1007/s00406-012-0377-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci        ISSN: 0940-1334            Impact factor:   5.270


  61 in total

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8.  Subjective effects and the main reason for smoking in outpatients with schizophrenia: a case-control study.

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Review 5.  Smoking in schizophrenic patients: A critique of the self-medication hypothesis.

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Review 7.  Let's Open the Decision-Making Umbrella: A Framework for Conceptualizing and Assessing Features of Impaired Decision Making in Addiction.

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8.  Chronic low-grade peripheral inflammation is associated with severe nicotine dependence in schizophrenia: results from the national multicentric FACE-SZ cohort.

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