Back to Search Start Over

An Exploratory Pilot Study of the Relationship between Neural Correlates of Cognitive Control and Reduction in Cigarette Use among Treatment-Seeking Adolescent Smokers

Authors :
Hedy Kober
Iris M. Balodis
Patrick D. Worhunsky
Marc N. Potenza
Jiansong Xu
Thomas Liss
Suchitra Krishnan-Sarin
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Despite high rates of tobacco use during adolescence, few empirically validated smoking cessation strategies exist for adolescent smokers. Developing an understanding of the neural underpinnings of cognitive control processes in adolescent smokers, and their relationship to quit behaviors, may help advance the development of enhanced behavioral and pharmacological therapies. The current pilot study explored the relationship between brain responses during performance of the Stroop color-word interference task and reduction in tobacco use (as measured by changes in cotinine levels) in treatment-seeking adolescent smokers participating in a high-school-based smoking-cessation program. Eleven adolescent daily smokers participated in a pre-quit session during which neural activity in response to congruent and incongruent events in a Stroop task was examined using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Changes in urine cotinine levels from pre-quit baseline to end of treatment were calculated and correlated with brain activity. Adolescents with greater activation in the inferior frontal gyrus, insula, thalamus and anterior cingulate had greater reductions in cotinine levels. The preliminary observation of a relationship between treatment outcome and neural correlates of cognitive control prior to treatment onset provides insight into individual differences in adolescent brain function that might relate importantly to treatment outcome.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c1b2e94f33e9eb8387104107b181d35