The effects of acute cigarette smoking on cognitive functioning in chronic schizophrenia

2000 
Introduction. The prevalence of cigarette smoking among patients with schizophrenia is high. Nicotine stimulates acetylcholine (ACh) transmission, and patients with schizophrenia may suffer from reduced ACh activity due to the combined effects of antipsychotic and antiparkinsonian drug treatment. The present study was designed to test whether cigarette smoking is, in part, an adaptive response among patients with schizophrenia to temporarily enhance cognitive functioning through an increase in ACh tone. Methods. Thirty-three inpatients with chronic schizophrenia treated with either clozapine (high in anticholinergicity) or risperidone (low anticholinergicity) were administered a cognitive test battery under two experimental conditions: Acute Smoking and Abstinence. Results. Results showed a modest and fairly specific enhancement effect for smoking. During Acute Smoking a subset of patients on clozapine required less time to complete a test of attentional vigilance. Also, a significant interaction appeared...
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