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Nicotine
Source: National Institute on Drug
Abuse (NIDA) - http://teens.drugabuse.gov/facts/facts_nicotine1.asp
What Is It?
Nicotine is the drug in tobacco leaves. Whether someone smokes,
chews, or sniffs tobacco, he or she is delivering nicotine
to the brain. Each cigarette contains about 10 milligrams
of nicotine. Nicotine is what keeps people smoking despite
its harmful effects. Because the smoker inhales only some
of the smoke from a cigarette and not all of each puff is
absorbed in the lungs, a smoker gets about 1 to 2 milligrams
of the drug from each cigarette [1]. A drop of pure nicotine
would kill a personin fact, nicotine can be used as
a pesticide on crops. [2]
What Are the Common Street Names?
You might hear cigarettes referred to as smokes, cigs, or
butts. Smokeless tobacco is often called chew, dip, spit tobacco,
or snuff.
How Is It Used?
Tobacco can be smoked in cigarettes, cigars, or pipes. It
can be chewed or, if powdered, sniffed.
An alternative to cigarettes is "bidis." Originally
from India, bidis are hand-rolled. In the U.S., bidis are
popular with teens because they come in colorful packages
with flavor choices. Some teens think that bidis are less
harmful than regular cigarettes. But bidis have even more
nicotine, which may make people smoke more, causing them to
be more harmful to the lungs than cigarettes. [3]
How Many Teens Use It?
More than 3 and one-half million teens between the ages of
12 and 17 use tobaccothat's about 15 percent of teens
that age. Of those, just over 3 million, or 13 percent, smoke
cigarettes. In the U.S., 66.5 million people, or about 29
percent of the population, use tobacco. [9]
What are the Common Effects?
With each puff of a cigarette, a smoker pulls nicotine into
his or her lungs where it is absorbed into the blood. In eight
seconds, nicotine is in the brain, changing the way the brain
works. This process happens so fast because nicotine is shaped
like the natural brain chemical acetylcholine. Acetylcholine
is one of many chemicals called neurotransmitters that carry
messages between brain cells. Neurons have special spaces
called receptors, into which specific neurotransmitters can
fit, like a key fitting into a lock. Nicotine locks into acetylcholine
receptors in different parts of the brain, rapidly causing
changes in the body and brain. Nicotine raises the heart rate
and respiration (breathing) rate, and causes more glucose,
or blood sugar, to be released into the blood. This might
be why smokers feel more alert after smoking a cigarette.
[4],[6]
Nicotine also attaches to neurons (brain cells) that release
a neurotransmitter called dopamine. Nicotine stimulates neurons
to release unusually large amounts of dopamine. Dopamine stimulates
the brain's pleasure and reward circuit, a group of brain
structures called the limbic system involved in appetite,
learning, memory, and feelings of pleasure. Normally, pleasurable
feelings come from food, comfort, and the company of people
you love. But smoking cigarettes causes a flood of dopamine
in the smoker's brain. ItÕs this flood of dopamine
that gives the smoker intense feelings of pleasure. [6],[7]
Normally, neurons reabsorb neurotransmitters after they've
done their job of signaling other brain cells. But cigarette
smoke causes dopamine to stay in the spaces between neurons
called synapses. Researchers don't yet know exactly what component
of tobacco smoke blocks the reabsorption of dopamine into
neurons. [7]
In 40 minutes, half the effects of nicotine are gone. So
smokers get the urge to light up for another dose of the drug.
After repeated doses of nicotine, the brain changes. To adjust
to too much dopamine, the brain cuts production of the neurotransmitter
and reduces the number of some receptors. Now, the smoker
needs nicotine just to create normal levels of dopamine in
his or her brain. Without nicotine, the smoker feels irritable
and depressed. The smoker has trained the limbic system to
crave tobacco. Think about how you long for a cold drink on
a hot day. Or how you want a sandwich when you are hungry.
Craving for tobacco is much stronger. [6]
These changes in the brain and body make nicotine highly
addictive. Other addictive drugs of abuse, including heroin
and cocaine, cause the same changes in the brain. [4]
While inhaling a cigarette, smokers are pulling more than
nicotine into their lungs. Tobacco smoke contains more than
4,000 chemicals. Besides nicotine, the most dangerous chemicals
in cigarette smoke are tar and carbon monoxide. Tar causes
lung cancer, emphysema, and bronchial diseases. Carbon monoxide
causes heart problems; smokers are at high risk for heart
disease. [2],[6]
Smokers also have a dulled sense of smell and taste, reduced
stamina for exercise and sports, and they smell of smoke.
After smoking for a long time, smokers find that their skin
ages faster and their teeth turn brown or discolored. [2]
Tobacco Kills
Each year, nearly half a million Americans die from tobacco
use. [6] One of every six deaths in the United States is a
result of smoking tobacco, making tobacco more lethal than
all other addictive drugs combined. [2]
Nervous or Depressed?
Scientists are learning how tobacco and nicotine affect teen
smokers. Studies going on for 25 years show a link between
heavy teen smoking and fear of going outside (agoraphobia).
Teens who smoke were 6 times more likely to get agoraphobia.
And, teen smokers were 15 times more likely to have panic
attacks than teens who did not smoke. Scientists think the
reason is that nicotine hurts blood vessels to the brain,
and also blocks air from the lungs. Whatever the reason, teen
smokers are more likely to have panic attacks, anxiety disorders,
and depression. [8]
References
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. NIDA Research ReportNicotine
Addiction (http://www.drugabuse.gov
/researchreports/nicotine/nicotine.html): NIH Pub. No.
01-4342. Bethesda, MD: NIDA, NIH, DHHS. Printed July,
1998. Reprinted Aug., 1998.
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. Mind Over Matter:
The Brain's Response to Nicotine (http://teens.drugabuse.gov/mom/mom_nic1.asp): NIH Pub. No. 00-3858. Bethesda, MD: NIDA,
NIH, DHHS. Printed 1997. Reprinted 1998, 2000.
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. NIDA Notes, vol 15,
no 1: Teen Alternative to Cigarettes Has Higher Concentrations
of Nicotine (http://www.drugabuse.gov/NIDA_Notes/NNVol15N1/BBoard.html): Bethesda, MD: NIDA, NIH, DHHS.
Retrieved June 2003.
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. NIDA InfoFacts: Cigarettes
and Other Nicotine Products (http://www.drugabuse.gov/Infofax/tobacco.html): Bethesda, MD: NIDA, NIH, DHHS. Retrieved
June 2003.
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. NIDA Published Article:
Parents: Nicotine is a Real Threat to Your Kids (http://www.drugabuse.gov/Published_Articles/Nicotinethreat.html) Bethesda, MD: NIDA, NIH,
DHHS. Retrieved June 2003.
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. Brain Power! The NIDA
Junior Scientists Program (http://www.nida.nih.gov/JSP/JSP.html):
NIH Pub. No. 01-4575. Bethesda, MD: NIDA, NIH, DHHS. Printed
2001.
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. Mind Over Matter:
The Brain's Response to Drugs Teacher's Guide (http://teens.drugabuse.gov/mom/tg_nic1.asp): NIH Pub. No. 020-3592. Bethesda, MD: NIDA,
NIH, DHHS. Printed 1997. Reprinted 1998, 2002. Revised
2000.
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. NIDA Notes, vol 16,
no 1: Smoking May Lead to Anxiety Disorders in Adolescents
and Young Adults (http://www.drugabuse.gov/NIDA_Notes/NNVol16N1/Smoking.html): Bethesda, MD: NIDA, NIH, DHHS.
Retrieved June 2003.
- SAMHSA Office of Applied Studies. Results from the 2001
National Household Survey on Drug Abuse: Volume III; Detailed
Tables Volume III-ABN; Prevalence Estimates and Sample
Sizes (http://www.samhsa.gov/oas/nhsda/2k1nhsda/vol1/chapter4.htm): SAMHSA, DHHS. Retrieved
June 2003. le 2.2A and Table 2.2B Source cited: SAMHSA
Office of Applied Studies, National Household Survey on
Drug Abuse 2000 and 2001.
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