Medizinonline Medizinonline
  • News
    • News
    • Market & Medicine
  • Patients
    • Disease patterns
    • Diagnostics
    • Therapy
  • Partner Content
    • Dermatology
      • Atopic dermatitis and psoriasis news
    • Diabetes
      • Dia-Month Club – Type 2 Diabetes
      • Diabetes in Motion
      • Diabetes Podcasts
    • Gastroenterology
      • IBD matters
    • Oncology
      • Swiss Oncology in motion
    • Orthopedics
      • Osteoporosis in motion
  • Departments
    • Allergology and clinical immunology
    • General Internal Medicine
    • Anesthesiology
    • Angiology
    • Surgery
    • Dermatology and venereology
    • Endocrinology and Diabetology
    • Nutrition
    • Gastroenterology and Hepatology
    • Genetics
    • Geriatrics
    • Gynecology
    • Hematology
    • Infectiology
    • Cardiology
    • Nephrology
    • Neurology
    • Emergency and intensive care medicine
    • Nuclear Medicine
    • Oncology
    • Ophthalmology
    • ORL
    • Orthopedics
    • Pediatrics
    • Pharmacology and toxicology
    • Pharmaceutical medicine
    • Phlebology
    • Physical medicine and rehabilitation
    • Pneumology
    • Prevention and health care
    • Psychiatry and psychotherapy
    • Radiology
    • Forensic Medicine
    • Rheumatology
    • Sports Medicine
    • Traumatology and trauma surgery
    • Tropical and travel medicine
    • Urology
    • Dentistry
  • CME & Congresses
    • CME continuing education
    • Congress Reports
    • Congress calendar
  • Practice
    • Noctimed
    • Practice Management
    • Jobs
    • Interviews
  • Log In
  • Register
  • My account
  • Contact
  • Publications
  • Contact
  • Deutsch
  • English
  • Français
  • Italiano
  • Português
  • Español
Subscribe
Medizinonline Medizinonline
Medizinonline Medizinonline
  • News
    • News
    • Market & Medicine
  • Patienten
    • Krankheitsbilder
    • Diagnostik
    • Therapie
  • Partner Content
    • Dermatology
      • Atopic dermatitis and psoriasis news
    • Diabetes
      • Dia-Month Club – Type 2 Diabetes
      • Diabetes in Motion
      • Diabetes Podcasts
    • Gastroenterology
      • IBD matters
    • Oncology
      • Swiss Oncology in motion
    • Orthopedics
      • Osteoporosis in motion
    • Phytotherapie
    • Rheumatology
  • Departments
    • Fachbereiche 1-13
      • Allergology and clinical immunology
      • General Internal Medicine
      • Anesthesiology
      • Angiology
      • Surgery
      • Dermatology and venereology
      • Endocrinology and Diabetology
      • Nutrition
      • Gastroenterology and Hepatology
      • Genetics
      • Geriatrics
      • Gynecology
      • Hematology
    • Fachbereiche 14-26
      • Infectiology
      • Cardiology
      • Nephrology
      • Neurology
      • Emergency and intensive care medicine
      • Nuclear Medicine
      • Oncology
      • Ophthalmology
      • ORL
      • Orthopedics
      • Pediatrics
      • Pharmacology and toxicology
      • Pharmaceutical medicine
    • Fachbereiche 26-38
      • Phlebology
      • Physical medicine and rehabilitation
      • Phytotherapy
      • Pneumology
      • Prevention and health care
      • Psychiatry and psychotherapy
      • Radiology
      • Forensic Medicine
      • Rheumatology
      • Sports Medicine
      • Traumatology and trauma surgery
      • Tropical and travel medicine
      • Urology
      • Dentistry
  • CME & Congresses
    • CME continuing education
    • Congress Reports
    • Congress calendar
  • Practice
    • Noctimed
    • Practice Management
    • Jobs
    • Interviews
Login

Sie haben noch keinen Account? Registrieren

  • Nicotine addiction

Influence of retrieval-extinction training on smoking behavior.

    • Psychiatry and psychotherapy
    • RX
    • Studies
  • 2 minute read

Smokers who want to quit use often report craving. One study addresses the question of whether retrieval-extinction training can help maintain abstinence or reduce use.

Research question: Key stimuli (“cues”) play an important role with regard to learning behavior and memory processing in addictive disorders. Smokers who want to quit often report craving triggered by conditioned stimuli, such as an ashtray or lighter. Can “retrieval-extinction” (RE) training [1] help maintain abstinence or reduce use?

Background: Exposure therapies, in which the patient is repeatedly exposed to a key stimulus, show little or only brief effect in addiction disorders, in contrast to anxiety disorders. In particular, maladaptive reward memories, which play a major role in addictive behaviors, show resistance to long-term extinction. However, prior research on memory processing in addictive behaviors indicates that RE training can attenuate or eliminate the effects of key stimuli. For example, a study of formerly heroin-dependent patients showed that RE training significantly reduced craving triggered by “cues” [2]. In RE training, the subject is first presented with the unconditioned stimulus, e.g., cigarette smoke or pictures of people smoking, and then exposure therapy is initiated with the conditioned stimulus. It is thought that reward memories can be destabilized by reactivation (“retrieval”) and thus “overwritten” or altered for a period of time.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: This prospective randomized trial examined the impact of RE training on 88 nicotine-dependent patients. These were divided equally into two groups. The RE training group was first shown a video with smokers, then extinction training was started regarding new and known key stimuli. The control group watched a neutral video followed by the same extinction training. Primary endpoint: Craving to key stimuli (by questionnaires and physiological response) was assessed in test sessions after 24h, two weeks, and one month. Secondary endpoint: Furthermore, smoking behavior was assessed in both groups.

Results: One-month follow-up showed that mean craving was significantly lower in the RE group (p<0.05). Likewise, craving after exposure to smoking videos and the newly presented key stimuli was more attenuated in the RE group than in the non-RE group (p=0.4). The average number of cigarettes smoked was also significantly lower in the RE group. Specifically, significantly more patients achieved a 60% reduction in the RE group (51.5%) compared with the non-RE group (25.6%). At 1-month follow-up, this difference was significant (p=0.6; 2-week and 1-month follow-up, p=0.18 and p=0.04, respectively).

Conclusion: RE training provides an easy-to-implement, low-risk brief intervention in the treatment of addictive disorders. Future studies should examine the effect of RE training as part of a multimodal approach to addiction treatment.

 

InFo NEUROLOGY & PSYCHIATRY 2017; 15(3): 33.

Autoren
  • Dr. med. Alexandra Kirsten
Publikation
  • InFo NEUROLOGIE & PSYCHIATRIE
Related Topics
  • Addiction
  • cues
  • RE Training
  • Retrieval-extinction training
  • Smoking
  • Weaning
Previous Article
  • Interventional vs. surgical heart valve therapy

Which technique for which patient?

  • Cardiology
  • Education
  • RX
  • Surgery
View Post
Next Article
  • Sport and health

Sport instead of pill

  • News
  • Prevention and health care
  • RX
  • Sports Medicine
View Post
You May Also Like
View Post
  • 6 min
  • Obesity as a chronic disease: an interdisciplinary perspective

Neurobiological mechanisms of obesity

    • Congress Reports
    • General Internal Medicine
    • Nutrition
    • Prevention and health care
    • Psychiatry and psychotherapy
    • RX
    • Studies
View Post
  • 5 min
  • Oncolytic virus in stage II melanoma

Innovative method for predicting therapy response

    • Dermatology and venereology
    • Education
    • Oncology
    • RX
    • Studies
View Post
  • 3 min
  • Phimosis and penile cancer under SGLT2i

Increased risk for men with T2D

    • Congress Reports
    • Endocrinology and Diabetology
    • General Internal Medicine
    • RX
    • Studies
    • Urology
View Post
  • 12 min
  • Diabetic ketoacidosis

Recommendations for action in practice

    • Cases
    • CME continuing education
    • Emergency and intensive care medicine
    • Endocrinology and Diabetology
    • Hematology
    • Nephrology
    • RX
View Post
  • 6 min
  • Migraine: better quality of life thanks to multimodal care

Broader selection of innovative migraine prophylactics and acute therapies

    • Congress Reports
    • Neurology
    • Pharmacology and toxicology
    • RX
    • Studies
View Post
  • 4 min
  • Therapy of non-tumor-related pain

Do not prescribe opioids lightly for musculoskeletal pain

    • General Internal Medicine
    • Pharmacology and toxicology
    • Prevention and health care
    • RX
    • Studies
View Post
  • 14 min
  • "Forgotten axis" between plant substances, gut and systemic health

Microbiome and phytotherapy

    • Education
    • Endocrinology and Diabetology
    • Gastroenterology and Hepatology
    • General Internal Medicine
    • Infectiology
    • Neurology
    • Nutrition
    • Pharmaceutical medicine
    • Phytotherapy
    • RX
    • Studies
View Post
  • 3 min
  • Migraine

Fremanezumab for comorbid migraine and depression

    • Neurology
    • Pharmacology and toxicology
    • RX
    • Studies
  • IBD matters

    Zum Thema
Top CME content
  • 1
    Causes and prevention at work
  • 2
    Yellow nail and Swyer-James syndrome
  • 3
    Recommendations for action in practice
  • 4
    From the β-cell to the center: the versatile role of amylin
  • 5
    Communication as the key to therapy adherence

Newsletter

Sign up and stay up to date

Subscribe
Medizinonline Medizinonline
  • Contact
  • General terms and conditions
  • Imprint

Input your search keywords and press Enter.