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September 26th, 2008:

Light vs Regular Cigarettes on Nicotine

26-Sep-2008 – University of California – Los Angeles

Do ‘light’ cigarettes deliver less nicotine to the brain than regular cigarettes?

For decades now, cigarette makers have marketed so-called light cigarettes — which contain less nicotine than regular smokes — with the implication that they are less harmful to smokers’ health. A new UCLA study shows, however, that they deliver nearly as much nicotine to the brain.

Reporting in the current online edition of the International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology, UCLA psychiatry professor Dr. Arthur L. Brody and colleagues found that low-nicotine cigarettes act similarly to regular cigarettes, occupying a significant percentage of the brain’s nicotine receptors.

Light cigarettes have nicotine levels of 0.6 to 1 milligrams, while regular cigarettes contain between 1.2 and 1.4 milligrams.

The researchers also looked at de-nicotinized cigarettes, which contain only a trace amount of nicotine (0.05 milligrams) and are currently being tested as an adjunct to standard smoking-cessation treatments. They found that even that low a nicotine level is enough to occupy a sizeable percentage of receptors.

“The two take-home messages are that very little nicotine is needed to occupy a substantial portion of brain nicotine receptors,” Brody said, “and cigarettes with less nicotine than regular cigarettes, such as ‘light’ cigarettes, still occupy most brain nicotine receptors. Thus, low-nicotine cigarettes function almost the same as regular cigarettes in terms of brain nicotine-receptor occupancy.

“It also showed us that de-nicotinized cigarettes still deliver a considerable amount of nicotine to the brain. Researchers, clinicians and smokers themselves should consider that fact when trying to quit.”

In the brain, nicotine binds to specific molecules on nerve cells called nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, or nAChRs. When nerve cells communicate, nerve impulses jump chemically across gaps between cells called synapses by means of neurotransmitters. The neurotransmitters then bind to the receptor sites on nerve cells — in the case acetylcholine resulting in the release of a pleasure-inducing chemical called dopamine. Nicotine mimics acetylcholine, but it lasts longer, releasing more dopamine.

“It can cause specific neurons to communicate and thus increases dopamine for an extended period of time,” Brody said. “Most scientists believe that’s one key reason why nicotine is so addictive.”

In an earlier study, researchers determined that smoking a regular, non-light cigarette resulted in the occupancy of 88 percent of these nicotine receptors. However, that study did not determine whether inhaling nicotine or any of the thousands of other chemical found in cigarette smoke resulted in this receptor occupancy. The central goal of the present study was to determine if factors associated with smoking — other than nicotine — resulted in nAChR occupancy.

The authors reasoned that if nicotine is solely responsible for receptor occupancy, then smoking a de-nicotinized cigarette or a low-nicotine cigarette would result in the occupancy of roughly 23 percent and 78 percent of nicotine receptors, respectively, based on the cigarettes’ nicotine content.

“That would still be substantial,” Brody said.

Fifteen smokers participated in the study. Each was given positron emission tomography (PET) scans, a brain-imaging technique that uses minute amounts of radiation-emitting substances to tag specific molecules. In this case, the tracer was designed to bind to the nicotine receptors in the brain.

The researchers could then measure what percentage of the tracer was displaced by nicotine when the research subjects smoked. In total, 24 PET scans were taken of participants’ brains before and after three different conditions: not smoking, smoking a de-nicotinized cigarette and smoking a low-nicotine cigarette.

The PET data showed that smoking a de-nicotinized cigarette and a low-nicotine cigarette occupied 26 percent and 79 percent of the receptors, respectively, which was very close to what the researchers had originally estimated.

“Given the consistency of findings between our previous study with regular cigarettes and the present study — that showed us that inhaling nicotine during smoking is solely responsible for occupancy of brain nicotine receptors,” Brody said.

English Pub Sells Electronic Cigarettes To Indoor Smokers

Patrick Horan with wires – Herald Sun – AFP, Reuters | September 26, 2008

AN English pub reckons it has the perfect solution to the smoking ban as their winter approaches – an electronic cigarette.

The UK Telegraph reports that the Butler’s Arms near Birmingham is selling the new E.cig, a device that smokes like a real cigarette with users getting a shot of nicotine every time they inhale.

It even produces a cloud of water vapour with every puff.

Electronic cigarettes are usually made of stainless steel and have a chamber for storing liquid nicotine in various concentrations.

Users puff on them as they would a real cigarette but do not light them – rather the cigarettes produce a fine, heated mist which is absorbed into the lungs.

The makers of the product, The Electronic Cigarette Company, claims the gadgets offer a “new generation of healthier smoking”.

The pub’s assistant manager Becky Giles, 18, told the Telegraph: “It is just like a real cigarette but without all the bad elements.

“There is no harm to other people in the bar as no smoke is given out, just water vapour, and there is no smell like with a real cigarette.”

But despite Becky’s considered opinion, the World Health Organisation isn’t so sure, warning the product could prove highly poisonous because it has not been subjected to rigorous scientific tests.

“It’s 100 per cent false to affirm this is a therapy for smokers to quit,” WHO anti-tobacco official Douglas Bettcher told journalists.

“There are a number of chemical additives in the product which could be very toxic,” he warned.

The WHO “knows of absolutely no scientific evidence whatsoever that would confirm that the electronic cigarette is a safe and effective smoking cessation device,” he added.

The WHO is particularly aggrieved that some manufacturers have implied the organisation views it as a legitimate nicotine replacement therapy, like nicotine gum, lozenges and patches.

“Manufacturers of this electronic cigarette around the world have included WHO’s name or logo, for example on their website, on package inserts or on advertisements,” Bettcher said, without naming any company or manufacturer.

The WHO has sent “cease-and-desist” letters to the manufacturers demanding they immediately withdraw these claims or otherwise face legal action.

First made in China and sold mainly over the internet in countries including Brazil, Britain, Canada and Israel, electronic cigarettes have grown in popularity despite a lack of regulatory approval.

Back at the Butler’s Arms, a starter pack costs £39.99 ($88), and users can choose between No nicotine, Low, medium or high nicotine, menthol, strawberry or cherry.