New
analysis of smoking and schizophrenia suggests causal
link
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[July 10, 2015]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON, July 10 (Reuters) - In research
that turns on its head previous thinking about links between
schizophrenia and smoking, scientists say they have found that
cigarettes may be a causal factor in the development of psychosis.
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After analyzing almost 15,000 tobacco users and 273,000 non users
and their relative rates of psychosis - where patients can
experience delusions, paranoia and hear voices in their heads - the
researchers said cigarette smoking appears to increase risk.
"While it's always hard to determine the direction of causality, our
findings indicate that smoking should be taken seriously as a
possible risk factor for developing psychosis," James MacCabe, a
psychosis expert who co-led the research at King's College London's
Institute of Psychiatry, told reporters.
He added, however, that tobacco was only one of many factors,
including certain genetic, diet, lifestyle and other influences,
raising a person's risk of developing schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia, a severe psychiatric disorder that affects around one
in 100 people, typically begins in early adulthood. Its most common
symptoms are disruptions in thinking and perception, and patients
often have psychotic experiences.
Although the link between smoking cigarettes and schizophrenia has
been noted before, until now many doctors have followed a
self-medication hypothesis whereby patients smoke to counteract the
stressful symptoms of schizophrenia or the side-effects of
antipsychotic medication.
For this study, McCabe's team analyzed rates of smoking in people
presenting with their first episode of psychosis and found that 57
per cent of these individuals were smokers.
People with a first episode of psychosis were three times more
likely to be smokers than those in the control groups.
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Robin Murray, a professor of psychiatric research at King's who
worked with McCabe, said activity in the brain's dopamine system
might be one explanation of a possible causal link between smoking
and psychosis.
"Excess dopamine is the best biological explanation we have for
psychotic illnesses," he told the briefing. "It's possible that
nicotine exposure, by increasing the release of dopamine, causes
psychosis to develop."
Previous studies, some by Murray, have also linked cannabis use to
psychosis. But there is much debate about whether this is causal or
whether there may be shared genes which predispose people to both
cannabis use and schizophrenia.
McCabe said the new results on smoking suggest "it might even be
possible that the real villain is tobacco, not cannabis" -- since
cannabis users often combine the drug with tobacco.
(Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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