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Neuroimaging of Nicotine Dependence: Key Findings and Application to the Study of Smoking–Mental Illness Co-morbidity
2009
Journal of dual diagnosis
Modern neuroimaging techniques offer the opportunity to non-invasively study neuroanatomical and neurofunctional correlates of nicotine dependence and its treatment. In the present review, the most widely used neuroimaging techniques-magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET) and functional MRI (fMRI)-are briefly described and their strengths and limitations discussed. The use of these techniques has resulted in new insights into the neuropharmacology of tobacco
doi:10.1080/15504260902869204
pmid:19756221
pmcid:PMC2743422
fatcat:kravede3ejavxiyqaurijnqzha