The Association Between Chronic Tobacco Smoking and Brain Alterations in Schizophrenia: A Systematic Review of Magnetic Resonance Imaging Studies.

IF 5.3 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Merel Koster, Lilli Mannsdörfer, Marieke van der Pluijm, Lieuwe de Haan, Tim Ziermans, Guido van Wingen, Jentien Vermeulen
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Abstract

Background and hypothesis: The high co-occurrence of tobacco smoking in patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD) poses a serious health concern, linked to increased mortality and worse clinical outcomes. The mechanisms underlying this co-occurrence are not fully understood.

Study design: Addressing the need for a comprehensive overview of the impact of tobacco use on SSD neurobiology, we conducted a systematic review of neuroimaging studies (including structural, functional, and neurochemical magnetic resonance imaging studies) that investigate the association between chronic tobacco smoking and brain alterations in patients with SSD.

Study results: Eight structural and fourteen functional studies were included. Structural studies show widespread independent and additive reductions in gray matter in relation to smoking and SSD. The majority of functional studies suggest that smoking might be associated with improvements in connectivity deficits linked to SSD. However, the limited number of and high amount of cross-sectional studies, and high between-studies sample overlap prevent a conclusive determination of the nature and extent of the impact of smoking on brain functioning in patients with SSD. Overall, functional results imply a distinct neurobiological mechanism for tobacco addiction in patients with SSD, possibly attributed to differences at the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor level.

Conclusions: Our findings highlight the need for more longitudinal and exposure-dependent studies to differentiate between inherent neurobiological differences and the (long-term) effects of smoking in SSD, and to unravel the complex interaction between smoking and schizophrenia at various disease stages. This could inform more effective strategies addressing smoking susceptibility in SSD, potentially improving clinical outcomes.

长期吸烟与精神分裂症患者大脑变化之间的关系:磁共振成像研究的系统回顾》。
背景与假设:精神分裂症谱系障碍(SSD)患者同时吸烟的比例很高,这是一个严重的健康问题,与死亡率升高和临床疗效恶化有关。研究设计:研究设计:为了全面了解烟草使用对 SSD 神经生物学的影响,我们对神经影像学研究(包括结构、功能和神经化学磁共振成像研究)进行了系统回顾,这些研究调查了长期吸烟与 SSD 患者大脑改变之间的关系:研究结果:共纳入八项结构性研究和十四项功能性研究。结构性研究表明,吸烟和 SSD 患者的灰质普遍存在独立和相加的减少。大多数功能研究表明,吸烟可能与改善与 SSD 相关的连接缺陷有关。然而,横断面研究的数量有限且数量较多,研究间样本重叠率较高,因此无法确定吸烟对 SSD 患者大脑功能影响的性质和程度。总之,功能研究结果表明,SSD患者的烟草成瘾具有独特的神经生物学机制,这可能归因于尼古丁乙酰胆碱受体水平的差异:我们的研究结果突出表明,有必要进行更多的纵向研究和暴露依赖性研究,以区分固有的神经生物学差异和吸烟对 SSD 的(长期)影响,并揭示吸烟与精神分裂症在不同疾病阶段的复杂相互作用。这将为解决 SSD 患者吸烟易感性的更有效策略提供依据,从而改善临床预后。
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来源期刊
Schizophrenia Bulletin
Schizophrenia Bulletin 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
11.40
自引率
6.10%
发文量
163
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Schizophrenia Bulletin seeks to review recent developments and empirically based hypotheses regarding the etiology and treatment of schizophrenia. We view the field as broad and deep, and will publish new knowledge ranging from the molecular basis to social and cultural factors. We will give new emphasis to translational reports which simultaneously highlight basic neurobiological mechanisms and clinical manifestations. Some of the Bulletin content is invited as special features or manuscripts organized as a theme by special guest editors. Most pages of the Bulletin are devoted to unsolicited manuscripts of high quality that report original data or where we can provide a special venue for a major study or workshop report. Supplement issues are sometimes provided for manuscripts reporting from a recent conference.
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