4.7 Article

Nicotine Withdrawal Increases Threat-Induced Anxiety but Not Fear: Neuroadaptation in Human Addiction

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 68, Issue 8, Pages 719-725

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2010.06.003

Keywords

Addiction; anxiety; fear; nicotine withdrawal; startle response; stress neuroadaptation

Funding

  1. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
  2. National Institute on Drug Abuse [R01 AA 15384, R36 DA022373, P50 DA019706]

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Background: Stress response neuroadaptation has been repeatedly implicated in animal addiction models for many drugs, including nicotine. Programmatic laboratory research that examines the stress response of nicotine-deprived humans is necessary to confirm that stress neuroadaptations observed in animal models generalize to humans. Methods: Two experiments tested the prediction that nicotine deprivation selectively increases startle response associated with anxiety during unpredictable threat but not fear during imminent, predictable threat. Dependent smokers (n = 117) were randomly assigned to 24-hour nicotine-deprived or nondeprived groups and participated in one of two experiments wherein electric shock was administered either unpredictably (noncontingent shock; Experiment 1) or predictably (cue-contingent shock; Experiment 2). Results: Nicotine deprivation increased overall startle response in Experiment 1, which involved unpredictable administration of shock. Age of first cigarette and years of daily smoking were significant moderators of this deprivation effect. Self-reported withdrawal symptoms also predicted startle response during unpredictable shock. In contrast, nicotine deprivation did not alter overall or fear-potentiated startle in Experiment 2, which involved predictable administration of shock. Conclusions: These results provide evidence that startle response during unpredictable threat may be a biomarker of stress neuroadaptations among smokers in nicotine withdrawal. Contrast of results across unpredictable versus predictable shock experiments provides preliminary evidence that these stress neuroadaptations manifest selectively as anxiety during unpredictable threat rather than in every stressful context. Individual differences in unpredictable threat startle response associated with withdrawal symptoms, age of first cigarette, and years daily smoking link this laboratory biomarker to clinically relevant indexes of addiction risk and relapse.

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