The relationship between nicotine and psychosis

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Abstract

Cigarette smoking is strongly associated with psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia. For several decades it was assumed that the relationship could be explained by reverse causation; that smoking was secondary to the illness itself, either through self-medication or a process of institutionalization, or was entirely explained by confounding by cannabis use or social factors. However, studies have exposed that such hypotheses cannot fully explain the association, and more recently a bidirectional relationship has been proposed wherein cigarette smoking may be causally related to risk of psychosis, possibly via a shared genetic liability to smoking and psychosis. We review the evidence for these candidate explanations, using findings from the latest epidemiological, neuroimaging, genetic and preclinical work.

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Quigley, H., & MacCabe, J. H. (2019, June 1). The relationship between nicotine and psychosis. Therapeutic Advances in Psychopharmacology. SAGE Publications Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1177/2045125319859969

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