Not all smokers are alike: the hidden cost of sustained attention during nicotine abstinence.
Harshawardhan U DeshpandeJohn R FedotaJuan CastilloBetty Jo SalmeronThomas J RossElliot A SteinPublished in: Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (2022)
Nicotine Withdrawal Syndrome (NWS)-associated cognitive deficits are notably heterogeneous, suggesting underlying endophenotypic variance. However, parsing this variance in smokers has remained challenging. In this study, we identified smoker subgroups based on response accuracy during a Parametric Flanker Task (PFT) and then characterized distinct neuroimaging endophenotypes using a nicotine state manipulation. Smokers completed the PFT in two fMRI sessions (nicotine sated, abstinent). Based on response accuracy in the stressful, high cognitive demand PFT condition, smokers split into high (HTP, n = 21) and low task performer (LTP, n = 24) subgroups. Behaviorally, HTPs showed greater response accuracy (88.68% ± 5.19 SD) vs. LTPs (51.04% ± 4.72 SD), independent of nicotine state, and greater vulnerability to abstinence-induced errors of omission (EOm, p = 0.01). Neurobiologically, HTPs showed greater BOLD responses in attentional control brain regions, including bilateral insula, dorsal ACC, and frontoparietal Cx for the [correct responses (-) errors of commission] PFT contrast in both states. A whole-brain functional connectivity (FC) analysis with these subgroup-derived regions as seeds identified two circuits: Precentral Cx↔Insula and Insula↔Occipital Cx, with abstinence-induced FC strength increases seen only in HTPs. Finally, abstinence-induced FC and behavior (EOm) differences were positively correlated for HTPs in a Precentral Cx↔Orbitofrontal cortical circuit. In sum, only the HTP subgroup demonstrated sustained attention deficits following 48-hr nicotine abstinence, a stressor in dependent smokers. Unpacking underlying smoker heterogeneity with this 'dual (task and abstinence) stressor' approach revealed discrete smoker subgroups with differential attentional deficits to withdrawal that could be novel pharmacological/behavioral targets for therapeutic interventions to improve cessation outcomes.
Keyphrases
- smoking cessation
- functional connectivity
- resting state
- working memory
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- drug induced
- emergency department
- metabolic syndrome
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- single cell
- computed tomography
- clinical trial
- white matter
- neuropathic pain
- adipose tissue
- case report
- brain injury
- spinal cord injury
- contrast enhanced
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- data analysis