Caggiula_2001_Pharmacol.Biochem.Behav_70_515

Reference

Title : Cue dependency of nicotine self-administration and smoking - Caggiula_2001_Pharmacol.Biochem.Behav_70_515
Author(s) : Caggiula AR , Donny EC , White AR , Chaudhri N , Booth S , Gharib MA , Hoffman A , Perkins KA , Sved AF
Ref : Pharmacol Biochem Behav , 70 :515 , 2001
Abstract :

A paradox exists regarding the reinforcing properties of nicotine. The abuse liability associated with smoking equals or exceeds that of other addictive drugs, yet the euphoric, reinforcing and other psychological effects of nicotine, compared to these other drugs, are more subtle, are manifest under more restricted conditions, and do not readily predict the difficulty most smokers experience in achieving abstinence. One possible resolution to this apparent inconsistency is that environmental cues associated with drug delivery become conditioned reinforcers and take on powerful incentive properties that are critically important for sustaining smoking in humans and nicotine self-administration in animals. We tested this hypothesis by using a widely employed self-administration paradigm in which rats press a lever at high rates for 1 h/day to obtain intravenous infusions of nicotine that are paired with two types of visual stimuli: a chamber light that when turned on signals drug availability and a 1-s cue light that signals drug delivery. We show that these visual cues are at least as important as nicotine in sustaining a high rate of responding once self-administration has been established, in the degree to which withdrawing nicotine extinguishes the behavior, and in the reinstatement of lever pressing after extinction. Additional studies demonstrated that the importance of these cues was manifest under both fixed ratio and progressive ratio (PR) schedules of reinforcement. The possibility that nicotine-paired cues are as important as nicotine in smoking behavior should refocus our attention on the psychology and neurobiology of conditioned reinforcers in order to stimulate the development of more effective treatment programs for smoking cessation.

PubMedSearch : Caggiula_2001_Pharmacol.Biochem.Behav_70_515
PubMedID: 11796151

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Citations formats

Caggiula AR, Donny EC, White AR, Chaudhri N, Booth S, Gharib MA, Hoffman A, Perkins KA, Sved AF (2001)
Cue dependency of nicotine self-administration and smoking
Pharmacol Biochem Behav 70 :515

Caggiula AR, Donny EC, White AR, Chaudhri N, Booth S, Gharib MA, Hoffman A, Perkins KA, Sved AF (2001)
Pharmacol Biochem Behav 70 :515