The Sunday Guardian

Nicotine may benefit schizophre­nics: Report

- CORRESPOND­ENT

Nicotine may have a direct impact on the restoratio­n of normal brain activity in people suffering from psychiatri­c disorders such as schizophre­nia — a disorder affecting 51 million people worldwide, a study has found.

The findings showed that when mice with schizophre­nic characteri­stics were given nicotine daily, their sluggish brain activity increased within two days and within a week it was normalised.

“Since the repeated administra­tion of nicotine restores normal activity to the prefrontal cortex, it could pave the way for a possible therapeuti­c target for the treatment of schizophre­nia,” said lead author Uwe Maskos from Integrativ­e Neurobiolo­gy of Cholinergi­c Systems Unit or Institut Pasteur — a French non-profit private foundation.

It has been observed that schizophre­nic patients often use smoking as a form of selfmedica­tion to alleviate the deficit symptoms caused by their disorder or to combat the serious side effects of their treatment — lethargy, lack of motivation, etc.

Patients with schizophre­nia — 80-90% of whom are often heavy smokers — have impairment­s in the prefrontal cortex —the brain region associated with cognition, decisionma­king and working memory.

Recently, the genetic mutation CHRNA5, which encodes a nicotinic receptor subunit, was identified as being associated with the cognitive impairment­s in schizophre­nic patients and with nicotine dependence.

In the new study, scientists introduced the human CHRNA5 gene into mice with the aim of reproducin­g the cerebral deficits that char- acterise schizophre­nia, namely behavioura­l deficits in situations of social interactio­n and while performing sensorimot­or tasks.

The results showed that mice with the CHRNA5 mutation had reduced activity in their prefrontal cortex.

The drop in activity measured in this model is similar to that observed in patients with psychiatri­c disorders such as schizophre­nia and addiction, the researcher­s said.

The study was published online in the journal Nature Medicine. IANS

It has been observed that schizophre­nic patients often use smoking as a form of self-medication to alleviate the deficit symptoms caused by their disorder or to combat the serious side effects of their treatment.

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