AI Article Synopsis

  • Adolescent e-cigarette use is influenced by neurobiological factors, particularly the functional connectivity between the amygdala and insula, which may affect sleep problems and depression levels.
  • A study with 146 adolescents utilized resting-state fMRI to analyze the relationships between these brain regions and self-reported measures over a period of approximately 15 months.
  • Results indicated that stronger connectivity between the amygdala and the ventral insula was linked to more sleep issues, which in turn correlated with increased depressive symptoms and higher e-cigarette use, suggesting potential targets for intervention in preventing teen e-cigarette usage.

Article Abstract

Background: Adolescent electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) use remains high. Elucidating contributing factors may enhance prevention strategies. Neurobiologically, amygdala-insula resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) has been linked with aspects of sleep, affect, and substance use (SU). As such, we hypothesized that amygdala's rsFC with the insula would be associated with e-cigarette use via sleep problems and/or depression levels.

Methods: An adolescent sample (N = 146) completed a rs-fMRI scan at time 1 and self-reports at time 2 (∼15 months later). Given consistent associations between mental health outcomes and the rsFC of the laterobasal amygdala (lbAMY) with the anterior insula, we utilized a seed region (lbAMY) to region of interest (ROI) analysis approach to characterize brain-behavior relationships. Two serial mediation models tested the interrelations between amygdala's rsFC with distinct anterior insula subregions (i.e., ventral insula [vI], dorsal insula [dI]), sleep problems, depression levels, and days of e-cigarette use.

Results: An indirect effect was observed when considering the lbAMY's rsFC with the vI. Greater rsFC predicted more sleep problems, more sleep problems were linked with greater depressive symptoms, and greater depressive symptoms were associated with more e-cigarette use (indirect effect = 0.08, CI [0.01,0.21]). Indicative of a neurobiological dissociation, a similar indirect effect linking these variables was not observed when considering the lbAMY's rsFC with the dI (indirect effect = 0.03, CI [-0.001,0.10]).

Conclusions: These outcomes highlight functional interactions between the amygdala and insula as a neurobiological contributor to sleep problems, depressive symptoms, and ultimately SU thereby suggesting potential intervention points to reduce teen e-cigarette use.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9730909PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2022.107458DOI Listing

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