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Tobacco Addiction: Get Facts on Nicotine and Smoking

What Is Tobacco Addiction?

When people are addicted, they have a compulsive
need to seek out and use a substance, even when they understand the harm it can
cause. Tobacco products — cigarettes, cigars, pipes, and smokeless tobacco — can all
be addictive. Everyone knows that smoking is bad for you, and most people that
do it want to quit. In fact, nearly 35 million people make a serious attempt to
quit each year. Unfortunately, most who try to quit on their own relapse — often
within a week.

Is Nicotine Addictive?

Yes. It is actually the nicotine in tobacco that is
addictive. Each cigarette contains about 10 milligrams of nicotine. 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. Although that may not seem like much, it is enough to make
someone addicted.

Is Nicotine the Only Harmful Part of Tobacco?

No. Nicotine is only one of
more than 4,000 chemicals, many of which are poisonous, found in the smoke from
tobacco products. Smokeless tobacco products also contain many toxins, as well
as high levels of nicotine. Many of these other ingredients are things we would
never consider putting in our bodies, like tar, carbon monoxide, acetaldehyde,
and nitrosamines. Tar causes lung cancer, emphysema, and bronchial diseases.
Carbon monoxide causes heart problems, which is one reason why smokers are at
high risk for heart disease.

Factors Associated With Youth Tobacco Use

Some factors associated with youth
tobacco use include the following
:

  • Low socioeconomic status
  • Use and approval of tobacco use by peers or
    siblings
  • Exposure to smoking in movies
  • Lack of skills to resist influences to
    tobacco use
  • Smoking by parents or guardians and/or lack of parental support or
    involvement
  • Accessibility, availability, and price of tobacco products
  • A
    perception that tobacco use is the norm
  • Low levels of academic achievement
  • Low
    self-image or self-esteem
  • Exposure to tobacco advertising
  • Aggressive behavior
    (e.g., fighting, carrying weapons)

Tobacco use during adolescence is associated with the following health risk
behaviors
:

  • High-risk sexual behavior
  • Use of alcohol
  • Use of other drugs

SOURCE:

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

How Is Tobacco Used?

Tobacco can be smoked in cigarettes, cigars, or pipes.
It can be chewed or, if powdered, sniffed. “Bidis” are an alternative cigarette.
They originally came from India and were hand-rolled. In the United States, bidis were popular with teens because they come in colorful packages with flavor
choices. Some teens think that bidis are less harmful than regular cigarettes,
but in fact they have more nicotine, which may make people smoke more, giving
bidis the potential to be even more harmful than cigarettes. Hookah — or water
pipe smoking — practiced for centuries in other countries, has recently become
popular among teens in the United States as well. Hookah tobacco comes in many
flavors, and the pipe is typically passed around in groups. Although many hookah
smokers think it is less harmful than smoking cigarettes, water pipe smoking
still delivers the addictive drug nicotine and is at least as toxic as cigarette
smoking.

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,” “snus,” or “snuff.” People may refer to hookah smoking as “narghile,”
“argileh,” “shisha,” “hubble-bubble,” or “goza.”

How Many Teens Use It?

The good news is that smoking is at historically low
levels among 8th, 10th, and 12th graders, according to NIDA’s Monitoring the
Future study. In 2011, rates for smoking in the past month were reported as 18.7
percent for 12th graders, 11.8 percent for 10th graders, and 6.1 percent for 8th
graders.

Use of smokeless tobacco had been showing a decline over the past
decade — until 2009, when use began to rise. According to the study, in 2011
current use of smokeless tobacco among 8th graders was 3.5 percent and 6.6
percent among 10th graders. Among 12th graders, 8.3 percent reported using
smokeless tobacco in the last month, a number not seen since the late 1990s.

How Does Tobacco Deliver Its Effects?

With each puff of a cigarette, a smoker pulls nicotine and other harmful
substances into the lungs, where it is absorbed into the blood. It takes just 8
seconds for nicotine to hit the brain. Nicotine happens to be shaped like the
natural brain chemical acetylcholine. Acetylcholine is one of many chemicals
called neurotransmitters that carry messages between brain cells. Neurons (brain
cells) have specialized proteins called receptors, into which specific
neurotransmitters can fit, like a key fitting into a lock. Nicotine locks into
acetylcholine receptors, rapidly causing changes in the brain and body. For
instance, nicotine increases blood pressure, heart rate, and respiration
(breathing).

Nicotine also attaches to acetylcholine receptors on neurons that release a
neurotransmitter called dopamine. Dopamine is released normally when you
experience something pleasurable like good food, your favorite activity, or the
company of people you love. But smoking cigarettes causes neurons to release
excess dopamine, which is responsible for the feelings of pleasure. However,
this effect wears off rapidly, causing people who smoke to get the urge to light
up again for another dose of the drug.

Nicotine may be the primary addictive component in tobacco but it’s not the
only ingredient that is biologically important. Using advanced neuroimaging
technology, scientists have found that people who smoke have a significant
reduction in the levels of an enzyme called monoamine oxidase (MAO) in the brain
and throughout the body. This enzyme is responsible for the breakdown of
dopamine, other neurotransmitters involved in mood regulation, and in a variety
of bodily functions. Having lower amounts of MAO in the brain may lead to higher
dopamine levels and be another reason that people who smoke continue to do so — to
sustain the pleasurable feelings that high dopamine levels create.

Also, researchers have recently shown in animals that acetaldehyde, another
chemical constituent of tobacco smoke, dramatically increases the rewarding
properties of nicotine — particularly in adolescent animals — which may be one
reason why teens are more vulnerable to becoming addicted to tobacco than
adults.

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What Happens When Someone Uses Tobacco for Long Periods of Time?

Long-term use of nicotine frequently leads to addiction. Research is just
beginning to document all of the changes in the brain that accompany nicotine
addiction. The behavioral consequences of these changes are well documented,
however.

The way that nicotine is absorbed and metabolized by the body enhances its
addictive potential. Each inhalation brings a rapid distribution of nicotine to
the brain — peaking within 10 seconds and then disappearing quickly, along with
the associated pleasurable feelings. Over the course of the day, tolerance
develops — meaning that higher (or more frequent) doses are required to produce
the same initial effects. Some of this tolerance is lost overnight, and people
who smoke often report that the first cigarette of the day is the strongest or
the “best.”

When a person quits smoking, they usually experience withdrawal symptoms,
which often drive them back to tobacco use. Nicotine withdrawal symptoms include
irritability, cognitive and attentional deficits, sleep disturbances,
increased
appetite, and craving. Craving — an intense urge for nicotine that can persist for
6 months or longer — is an important but poorly understood component of the
nicotine withdrawal syndrome. Some people describe it as a major stumbling block
to quitting.

Withdrawal symptoms usually peak within the first few days and may subside
within a few weeks. The withdrawal syndrome is related to the pharmacological
effects of nicotine, but many behavioral factors also affect the severity and
persistence of withdrawal symptoms. For example, the cues associated with
smoking — the end of a meal, the sight or smell of a cigarette, the ritual of
obtaining, handling, lighting, and smoking the cigarette, the people you hung
out with when you smoked, and alcohol use — all can be powerful triggers of
craving that can last or re-emerge months or even years after smoking has
ceased. While nicotine gum and patches may stop the pharmacological aspects of
withdrawal, cravings often persist.




QUESTION

What is the average weight gain for those who quit smoking?
See Answer

What Are Other Adverse Health Effects?

Tobacco abuse harms every organ in the body. It has been conclusively linked
to leukemia, cataracts, and pneumonia, and accounts for about one-third of all
cancer deaths. The overall rates of death from cancer are twice as high among
people who smoke as those who don’t, with people who smoke heavily having rates
that are four times greater than those of people who don’t smoke. And, you
guessed it — foremost among the cancers caused by tobacco use is lung cancer. In
fact, cigarette smoking has been linked to about 90 percent of all lung cancer
cases, the number-one cancer killer of both men and women. Tobacco abuse is also
associated with cancers of the mouth, pharynx, larynx, esophagus, stomach,
pancreas, cervix, kidney, ureter, and bladder.

People who smoke also lose some of their sense of smell and taste, don’t have
the same stamina for exercise and sports they once did, and may smell of smoke.
After smoking for a long time, people find that their skin ages faster and their
teeth discolor or turn brown.

Smoking doesn’t just affect the person who smokes. People who do not smoke
are exposed to “secondhand smoke,” which comes from both the exhaled smoke and
from the smoke floating from the end of a cigarette, cigar, or pipe. Inhaling
secondhand smoke increases a person’s risk of developing heart disease by 25 to
30 percent and lung cancer by 20 to 30 percent. In fact, secondhand smoke is
estimated to contribute to as many as 40,000 deaths related to heart disease and
about 3,000 lung cancer deaths per year among people who do not smoke.
Secondhand smoke also causes respiratory problems in people who do not smoke,
like coughing, phlegm, and reduced lung function.

Children exposed to secondhand smoke are at an increased risk for
sudden
infant death syndrome, acute respiratory infections, ear problems, and more
severe asthma. And, believe it or not, dropped cigarettes are the leading cause
of residential fire fatalities, leading to more than 700 such deaths each year.

Each year, almost half a million Americans die from tobacco use. One of every
five deaths, or about 440,000 deaths, in the United States is a result of
tobacco use, making tobacco more lethal than all other addictive drugs combined.

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Smoking and Pregnancy: What Are the Risks?

In the United States between 2009 and 2010, 22.7 percent of teens age 15 to
17 smoked cigarettes during their pregnancies. Carbon monoxide and nicotine from
tobacco smoke may interfere with fetal oxygen supply — and because nicotine readily
crosses the placenta, it can reach concentrations in the fetus that are much
higher than maternal levels. Nicotine concentrates in fetal blood, amniotic
fluid, and breast milk, exposing both fetuses and infants to toxic effects.
These factors can have severe consequences for the fetuses and infants of
mothers who smoke, including increased risk for stillbirth, infant mortality,
sudden infant death syndrome, preterm birth, and respiratory problems. In
addition, smoking more than a pack a day during pregnancy nearly doubles the
risk that the affected child will become addicted to tobacco if that child
starts smoking.

How Is Tobacco Addiction Treated?

The good news is that treatments for tobacco addiction do work. Although some
people who smoke can quit without help, many people need help. Behavioral
treatment programs help people learn about and change their behaviors using
self-help materials, counselor-staffed telephone “quitlines,” and individual
therapy. Over-the-counter medications, such as the nicotine patch, gum,
inhalers, and lozenges, replace nicotine and relieve the symptoms of withdrawal.
It is important to know that nicotine replacement medicines can be safely used
as a medication when taken properly. They have lower overall nicotine levels
than tobacco and they have little abuse potential since they do not produce the
pleasurable effects of tobacco products. They also don’t contain the carcinogens
and gases found in tobacco smoke, making them a good treatment approach for
quitting.

There are also prescription medications now available for smoking cessation,
such as bupropion (Zyban) and varenicline tartrate (Chantix), that have been
shown to help people quit. But research shows that the most effective way to
quit smoking is to use both medications and behavioral treatment programs.

The bottom line: People who quit smoking can have immediate health benefits.
Believe it or not, within 24 hours of quitting, a person’s blood pressure
decreases and they have less of a chance of having a heart attack. Over the long
haul, quitting means less chance of stroke, lung and other cancers, and coronary
heart disease, and more chance for a long and healthy life.

From WebMD Logo

Smoking Cessation Resources
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What If a Person Wants To Quit?

If someone you know is smoking or using tobacco in another way, encourage him
or her to talk to a parent, school guidance counselor, or other trusted adult. A
national toll-free number, 1-800-QUIT-NOW (1-800-784-8669), can help people get
the information they need to quit smoking. Callers to the number are routed to
their state’s smoking cessation quitline or, in states that have not established
quitlines, to one maintained by the National Cancer Institute. In addition, a
Web site — www.smokefree.gov — from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
offers online advice and downloadable information to make stopping easier.

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