AI Article Synopsis

  • ADHD is linked to a higher risk of developing tobacco use disorder, with individuals starting smoking earlier, smoking more, and showing greater dependence on nicotine compared to those without ADHD.
  • A study using spontaneously hypertensive rats (an animal model for ADHD) tested their response to different doses of nicotine to see if they found nicotine more rewarding than control rats.
  • Results showed that the ADHD model rats did not have a stronger response to nicotine compared to control rats, suggesting that other factors may contribute to higher tobacco use in adolescents with ADHD, rather than just the reinforcing effects of nicotine.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is an independent risk factor for tobacco use disorder. Individuals with ADHD are more likely to begin smoking at a younger age, become a daily smoker sooner, smoke more cigarettes per day, and exhibit greater nicotine dependence than individuals without ADHD. It is unclear whether these findings are due to the reinforcing efficacy of nicotine being greater among individuals with ADHD. The purpose of the present study was to examine this issue using an animal model of ADHD, the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) strain.

Methods: Adolescent SHR and Wistar (control) rats were given access to a typically reinforcing nicotine unit dose (30 μg/kg), a threshold reinforcing nicotine dose (4 μg/kg), or saline under an FR 1 (week 1) and FR 2 (week 2) schedule during 23 h sessions to examine acquisition of self-administration. Behavioral economic demand elasticity was then evaluated at the 30 μg/kg dose through an FR escalation procedure.

Results: At the 30 μg/kg dose, SHR rats exhibited a lower average response rate, lower mean active to inactive lever discrimination ratio, and lower proportion of rats acquiring self-administration compared to control rats. During demand assessment, SHR rats showed no significant difference from Wistars in demand intensity (Q) or elasticity (α; i.e., reinforcing efficacy). In addition, no strain difference in acquisition measures were observed at the 4 μg/kg dose.

Discussion: These findings suggest that the increased risk of tobacco use disorder in adolescents with ADHD may not be attributable to a greater reinforcing efficacy of nicotine, and that other aspects of tobacco smoking (e.g., non-nicotine constituents, sensory factors) may play a more important role. A policy implication of these findings is that a nicotine standard to reduce initiation of tobacco use among adolescents in the general population may also be effective among those with ADHD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10225533PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1154773DOI Listing

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