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Title: Effect of bupropion treatment on brain activation induced by cigarette-related cues in smokers. Author: Culbertson CS, Bramen J, Cohen MS, London ED, Olmstead RE, Gan JJ, Costello MR, Shulenberger S, Mandelkern MA, Brody AL. Journal: Arch Gen Psychiatry; 2011 May; 68(5):505-15. PubMed ID: 21199957. Abstract: CONTEXT: Nicotine-dependent smokers exhibit craving and brain activation in the prefrontal and limbic regions when presented with cigarette-related cues. Bupropion hydrochloride treatment reduces cue-induced craving in cigarette smokers; however, the mechanism by which bupropion exerts this effect has not yet been described. OBJECTIVE: To assess changes in regional brain activation in response to cigarette-related cues from before to after treatment with bupropion (vs placebo). DESIGN: Randomized, double-blind, before-after controlled trial. SETTING: Academic brain imaging center. PARTICIPANTS: Thirty nicotine-dependent smokers (paid volunteers). INTERVENTIONS: Participants were randomly assigned to receive 8 weeks of treatment with either bupropion or a matching placebo pill (double-blind). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Subjective cigarette craving ratings and regional brain activations (blood oxygen level-dependent response) in response to viewing cue videos. RESULTS: Bupropion-treated participants reported less craving and exhibited reduced activation in the left ventral striatum, right medial orbitofrontal cortex, and bilateral anterior cingulate cortex from before to after treatment when actively resisting craving compared with placebo-treated participants. When resisting craving, reduction in self-reported craving correlated with reduced regional brain activation in the bilateral medial orbitofrontal and left anterior cingulate cortices in all participants. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment with bupropion is associated with improved ability to resist cue-induced craving and a reduction in cue-induced activation of limbic and prefrontal brain regions, while a reduction in craving, regardless of treatment type, is associated with reduced activation in prefrontal brain regions.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]