This study is the first to compare self-reports and biological measures of alcohol, tobacco and illicit drug uses in a large sample of inpatients suffering from various categories of psychiatric illnesses, allowing for cross-diagnosis comparisons.
Tobacco components other than nicotine might participate in the behavioural effects of smoking. In this study, in-vivo recordings of serotonergic dorsal raphe neurons were performed in the anesthetized rat, whereas tobacco extracts, cigarette smoke extracts, nicotine, nornicotine or anabasine were intravenously injected. All substances inhibited the neurons, and all inhibitions were completely blocked by the nicotine receptor antagonist mecamylamine. The effects of the extracts were much more potent than those of individual substances. These results support the hypothesis that the acute inhibition of serotonin neurons by tobacco compounds is completely related to an effect on nicotine receptors. Tobacco extracts and tobacco smoke extracts may be useful tools for the study of the effects of central effects of smoking.
Nicotine, harmane, and befloxatone inhibit the activity of raphe serotonergic neurons. Therefore, at least two tobacco compounds, nicotine and harmane, inhibit the activity of serotonergic neurons. The mechanism by which harmane inhibits serotonergic dorsal raphe neurons is likely unrelated to a MAO-A inhibitory effect.
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