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Background:
Objectives:
Eligibility:
Design:
Full description
Objective
The health risk associated with tobacco use is high, and is even higher in people with severe mental illness. The underlying brain circuitry for smoking-mental illness comorbidity is unknown. Identifying brain comorbidity circuitry is important for new therapeutic development. This study will examine whether a specific brain circuitry can explain the high rate of smoking in patients with schizophrenia. Identifying the key brain circuits associated with smoking, especially smoking in a high risk population, will provide concrete biomarkers for new therapeutic development, and ultimately reducing the smoking related health burden.
Study Population
Schizophrenic patients and their family members, non-schizophrenia controls and their family members, including smokers and nonsmokers in each of the four groups will be included in this study.
Design
Outcome Measures
Combining event-related and resting fMRI techniques, we propose to test the hypothesis that an abnormal dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) and ventral striatum (VS) circuit underlies the high prevalence of comorbid smoking in schizophrenia. We also propose to test specific clinical implications of this circuit including a within-subject event-related fMRI study to test the mechanistic implication of the rsFC signals, a prospective follow-up to test the circuit s predictive validity on smoking behavior change, and genetic studies to describe the path from genes to brain circuits to smoking behaviors.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
For all participants (patients, healthy controls, and family members):
For patients (smokers and non-smokers)
For smokers (patients, healthy controls, and family members):
For family members only:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
For patients only:
For all participants (patients and healthy controls):
For family members:
Family members meeting exclusion criteria 1-5 above may participate in the study unless they cannot safely give 70 ml blood. Their participation will, however, be limited to research interviews and questionnaires and phlebotomy or saliva collection for genetic testing.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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