People with schizophrenia have two- to three-times the mortality risk of the general population. This is primarily due to their unusually high rates of cigarette smoking, as well as other cardiovascular risk factors such as physical inactivity, obesity, high blood cholesterol and diabetes. Effective smoking treatments are needed to reduce morbidity and mortality in this population. Over a dozen experimental studies indicate that walking and other forms of exercise acutely reduce cigarette craving, nicotine withdrawal symptoms and smoking behavior in non-psychiatric smokers. However, the effects of acute exercise on smoking measures have not been studied in smokers with schizophrenia. This study will use a within-subjects, repeated-measures design, in which participants will undergo 4 laboratory sessions (order counterbalanced across participants): (1) smoking cues followed by exercise, (2) smoking cues followed by passive activity, (3) neutral cues followed by exercise, (4) neutral cues followed by passive activity. Outcome measures include cigarette craving, nicotine withdrawal symptoms, mood and smoking behavior. If the results of this study indicate that walking acutely reduces craving and smoking in smokers with schizophrenia, the next step in this research would be to test the effectiveness of a smoking cessation intervention that incorporates exercise bouts as a behavioral strategy for improving smoking cessation rates in this population.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
30
1-mile treadmill walk
20 min inactivity
Brown University
Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Cigarette craving
Questionnaire on Smoking Urges - Brief form
Time frame: within 10 minutes before and after exercise (or control activity)
Mood
Positive and Negative Affect Scales, which are brief questionnaire measures of positive and negative mood.
Time frame: within 10 minutes before and after exercise (or control activity)
Smoking habit withdrawal
Questionnaire measures of withdrawal from sensorimotor aspects of smoking
Time frame: within 10 minutes before and after exercise (or control activity)
Smoking choice
2-hr laboratory smoking choice assessment in which participants make a series of choices between smoking versus receiving a small amount of cash.
Time frame: initiated 10 minutes after exercise (or control activity)
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