CIGoutlet.net LOGO
 
Marlboro Camel
Winston Parliament
LM Virginia Slims
Dunhill Davidoff
Pall Mall Chesterfield
Lucky Strike Vogue
Rothmans More
Salem Kent
Gauloises Bond
Monte Carlo Mild Seven
West Magna
555 Viceroy
Dallas R1
Sobranie Karelia
Epique Sovereign
Esse Russian Style
Peter I Belomorkanal
Muratti Special Offer
Ashtray

Special Cigarettes Offer

We are happy to welcome you to

Cigars and Cigarettes Forum

We invite people from all over the world to exchange news, discuss tobacco related topics, online cigarettes sales and especially all questions related to our site CigOutlet.Net

Cheap Drugs


CIGoutlet Tobacco News
Tuberculosis Risk In Male Smokers With High Vitamin C Intake May Be Increased By Vitamin E
Six-year vitamin E supplementation increased tuberculosis risk by 72% in male smokers who had high dietary vitamin C intake, but vitamin E had no effect on those who had low dietary vitamin C intake, according to a study published in the British Journal
read more ...03/05/08
New Generation Of Tobacco Products Threatens Efforts To Reduce Tobacco Use, Save Lives In U.S.
An insidious new generation of tobacco products is threatening efforts to reduce tobacco use in the United States. A new report issued by a coalition of public health organizations describes how tobacco manufacturers take advantage of the lack of governm
read more ...03/05/08
Scotland: Schools To Get Smoking Clinics
Stop smoking clinics will be run in schools as part of a new drive to help city pupils give up smoking.
read more ...03/05/08
Smokers Find Quitting Easier After Damage To Brain Region

01/29/07

Smokers with a damaged insula - a region in the brain linked to emotion and feelings - quit smoking easily and immediately, according to a study in the Jan. 26 issue of the journal Science. The study provides direct evidence of smoking's grip on the brain. It also raises the possibility that other addictive behaviors may have an equally strong hold on neural circuits for pleasure. The senior authors of the study are Antoine Bechara and Hanna Damasio, both faculty in the year-old Brain and Creativity Institute at the University of Southern California, in collaboration with graduate students Nasir Naqvi, who was first author on the study, and David Rudrauf, both from the University of Iowa. "This is the first study of its kind to use brain lesions to study a drug addiction in humans," Naqvi said. In the 1990s, Antonio Damasio proposed the insula, a small island enclosed by the cerebral cortex, as a "platform for feelings and emotion." The Science study shows that the pleasure of smoking appears to rest on this platform. "It's really intriguing to think that disrupting this region breaks the pleasure feelings associated with smoking," said Damasio, director of the institute and holder of the David Dornsife Chair in Neuroscience at USC. "It is immediate. It's not that they smoke less. They don't smoke, period." The finding raises the question of whether damage to the insula also could cause a person to quit other addictive behaviors. Can a brain lesion cure someone of their bad habits? The answer is not yet known, Bechara said, but he suggested the phenomenon could be "generalizable" with respect to alcohol abuse, overeating and other addictions. The discovery of the insula's role in addiction opens new directions for therapies, Bechara said, including possible drugs targeted to a region that "no one paid attention to." "There is a lot of potential for pharmacological developments," Bechara said. Any treatment would need to preserve the beneficial functions of the insula. But Bechara noted that the region appears to be involved specifically in "learned behaviors" rather than the fundamental drives necessary for survival. As a result, it might be possible to target one without disrupting the other. Hanna Damasio, co-director of the institute and holder of the Dana Dornsife Chair in Neuroscience, also stressed the difference between habitual and instinctive behaviors. "Because the insula is now recognized as a key structure in processes of emotion and feeling, the fact that insular damage breaks down a learned habit such as smoking, demonstrates a powerful link between habit and emotion or feeling," she said. The finding that one small region could be the Achilles' heel of smoking addiction is especially surprising, given the brain-wide effects of nicotine on the nervous system. The study considered smokers with damage that did not include the insula, but the likelihood of disrupting the smoking addiction was many times greater when the insula was involved. ### Funding for the research came from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. The University of Iowa provided access to its extensive database of patients with brain lesions. The mission of the Brain and Creativity Institute is to study the neurological roots of human emotions, memory and communication and to apply the findings to problems in the biomedical and sociocultural arenas. The institute brings together technology and the social sciences in a novel interdisciplinary setting. For more information, go to

<< Prev CIGoutlet.NET News Home Next >>

Contact us | INFO | F.A.Q. | Privacy Policy | Terms & conditions | Price List
Tell a friend | Cigarettes for Europeans | About us | Site Map

All registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
We do not claim to be affiliated with the manufactures or tobacco companies.
XML Feed RSS Feed  yahoo Subscribe Via My MSN Add to Google

© 2002 All rights reserved by:  CIGoutlet .Net Logo