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Christine E Sheffer, PhD
CESheffer@uams.edu
Addiction
is a chronic, relapsing compulsive behavior. Relapse involves the choice
of an immediate reward over delayed reward. Similar to other substance
users, cigarette smokers tend to prefer smaller immediate rewards over
larger rewards received later.1 One session of repetitive
transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) applied to the dorsolateral
pre-frontal cortex (DLPFC) is known to affect decision-making in
simulated gambling tasks and may affect the preference to choose larger
delayed rewards as measured by delay discounting tasks.2,3
One session of rTMS also has been shown to temporarily reduce the number
of cigarettes smoked immediately after treatment.4 Currently
underway, this study is examining the effects of high-frequency rTMS on
the propensity to make more conservative decisions and delay reward with
non-smokers and smokers. With smokers, the number of cigarettes smoked
after stimulation will be examined as well. Twenty smokers and 20
non-smokers, blind to condition, will be assessed at baseline and after
10Hz, 20Hz, and sham rTMS over the DLPFC in a counterbalanced manner.
Preliminary results suggest a trend for more conservative
decision-making in non-smokers after exposure to 20Hz rTMS.
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Figures 1 and 2 show a possible trend whereby those who are
stimulated tend to make decisions on the Risky Choice Task
more quickly and more conservatively. |
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1. Bickel, W.K., Miller, M.L., Yi, R.,
Kowal, B.P., Lindquist, D.M. & Pitcock, J.A. (2007) Behavioral and
neuroeconomics of drug addiction: competing neural systems and temporal
discounting processes. Drug Alcohol Depend, 90 Suppl 1, S85-91.
2. Knoch, D. & Fehr, E. (2007) Resisting the power of temptations: the
right prefrontal cortex and self-control. Ann N Y Acad Sci, 1104,
123-34.
3. Knoch, D., Gianotti, L.R., Pascual-Leone, A., Treyer, V., Regard, M.,
Hohmann, M. & Brugger, P. (2006) Disruption of right prefrontal cortex
by low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation induces
risk-taking behavior. J Neurosci, 26(24), 6469-72.
4. Eichhammer, P., Johann, M., Kharraz, A., Binder, H., Pittrow, D.,
Wodarz, N. & Hajak, G. (2003) High-frequency repetitive transcranial
magnetic stimulation decreases cigarette smoking. J Clin Psychiatry,
64(8), 951-3.
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