Brain mechanism and Addiction: damaged "insula" eliminated Smoking

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070125/ap_on_he_me/smoking_brain_damage

Spot in brain may control smoking urge

By LAURAN NEERGAARD, AP Medical Writer

Damage to a silver dollar-sized spot deep in the brain seems to wipe
out the urge to smoke, a surprising discovery that may shed important
new light on addiction. The research was inspired by a stroke survivor
who claimed he simply forgot his two-pack-a-day addiction _ no
cravings, no nicotine patches, not even a conscious desire to quit.

"The quitting is like a light switch that went off," said Dr. Antoine
Bechara of the University of Southern California, who scanned the
brains of 69 smokers and ex-smokers to pinpoint the region involved.
"This is very striking."

Clearly brain damage isn't a treatment option for people struggling to
kick the habit.

But the finding, reported in Friday's edition of the journal Science,
does point scientists toward new ways to develop anti-smoking aids by
targeting this little-known brain region called the insula. And it
sparked excitement among addiction specialists who expect the insula
to play a key role in other addictions, too.

"It's a fantastic paper, it's a fantastic finding," said Dr. Nora
Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse and a
longtime investigator of the brain's addiction pathways.

"What this study shows unequivocally is the insula is a key structure
in the brain for perceiving the urges to take the drug," urges that
are "the backbone of the addiction," Volkow added.

Why? The insula appears to be where the brain turns physical reactions
into feelings, such as feeling anxious when your heart speeds up. When
those reactions are caused by a particular substance, the insula may
act like sort of a headquarters for cravings.

Some 44 million Americans smoke, and the government says more than
400,000 a year die of smoking-related illnesses. Declines in smoking
have slowed in recent years, making it unlikely that the nation will
reach a public health goal of reducing the rate to 12 percent by 2010.

Nicotine is one of the most addictive substances known, and it's
common for smokers to suffer repeated relapses when they try to quit.

So imagine Bechara's surprise at hearing a patient he code-named
"Nathan" note nonchalantly that "my body forgot the urge to smoke"
right after his stroke.

At the time, Bechara was at the University of Iowa studying the
effects of certain types of brain damage after strokes or other
injury. While Nathan was hospitalized, stroke specialists sent his
information to that brain registry. He was 38, had smoked since 14,
said he enjoyed it and had had no intention to quit. But his last puff
was the night before his stroke. His surprised wife said he never even
asked for a smoke while in the hospital.

It's not unusual for a health scare to prompt an attempt at quitting.
"That's the quitting that's not as interesting," Bechara said.

Instead, Nathan experienced what Bechara calls a "disruption of
smoking addiction," and he wanted to know why.

Bechara and colleagues culled their brain-damage registry for 69
patients who had smoked regularly before their injuries. Nineteen,
including Nathan, had damage to the insula. Thirteen of the
insula-damaged patients had quit smoking, 12 of them super-easily:
They quit within a day of the brain injury, and reported neither
smoking nor even feeling the urge since then.

Of the remaining 50 patients with damage in other brain regions, 19
quit smoking but only four met the broken-addiction criteria.

If Bechara's findings are validated, they suggest that developing
drugs that target the insula might help smokers quit. There are
nicotine receptors in the insula, meaning it should be possible to
create a nicotine-specific drug, Bechara said _ albeit years from now.

More immediately, NIDA's Volkow wants to try a different experiment:
Scientists can temporarily alter function of certain brain regions
with pulses of magnetic energy, called "transcranial magnetic
stimulation." She wants to see if it's possible to focus such magnetic
pulses on the insula, and thus verify its role.

Other neurologic functions are known to be involved with addiction,
too, such as the brain's "reward" or pleasure pathways. The insula
discovery doesn't contradict that work, but adds another layer to how
addiction grips the brain, Bechara said.

Copyright © 2007 Yahoo! Inc / Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press

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