Tobacco
and Other Nicotine Products
What are the street names/slang
terms for it?
Chew, Dip, Fags, Smoke.
What is it?
Tobacco is an
agricultural crop.
What does it
look like?
Brown cut up
leaves.
How is it used?
Tobacco is
usually smoked. Sometimes tobacco leaves are
"dipped" or "chewed" so the nicotine is
absorbed via the gums.
Nicotine is one
of the most heavily used addictive drugs in the United
States. Cigarette smoking has been the most popular method
of taking nicotine since the beginning of the 20th century.
In 1998, 60 million Americans were current cigarette smokers
(28 percent of all Americans aged 12 and older), and 4.1
million were between the ages of 12 and 17 (18 percent of
youth in this age bracket).
In 1989, the
U.S. Surgeon General issued a report that concluded that
cigarettes and other forms of tobacco, such as cigars, pipe
tobacco, and chewing tobacco, are addictive and that
nicotine is the drug in tobacco that causes addiction. In
addition, the report determined that smoking was a major
cause of stroke and the third leading cause of death in the
United States.
Health
Hazards
Nicotine is
highly addictive. It is both a stimulant and a sedative to
the central nervous system. The ingestion of nicotine
results in an almost immediate "kick" because it causes a
discharge of epinephrine from the adrenal cortex. This
stimulates the central nervous system, and other endocrine
glands, which causes a sudden release of glucose.
Stimulation is then followed by depression and fatigue,
leading the abuser to seek more nicotine. Nicotine is
absorbed readily from tobacco smoke in the lungs, and it
does not matter whether the tobacco smoke is from
cigarettes, cigars, or pipes.
Nicotine also
is absorbed readily when tobacco is chewed. With regular use
of tobacco, levels of nicotine accumulate in the body during
the day and persist overnight. Thus, daily smokers or
chewers are exposed to the effects of nicotine for 24 hours
each day. Nicotine taken in by cigarette or cigar smoking
takes only seconds to reach the brain but has a direct
effect on the body for up to 30 minutes.
Research has
shown that stress and anxiety affect nicotine tolerance and
dependence. The stress hormone corticosterone reduces the
effects of nicotine; therefore, more nicotine must be
consumed to achieve the same effect. This increases
tolerance to nicotine and leads to increased dependence.
Studies in animals have also shown that stress can directly
cause relapse to nicotine self-administration after a period
of abstinence.
Other studies
have shown that animals cannot discriminate between the
effects of nicotine and the effects of cocaine. Studies have
also shown that nicotine self-administration sensitizes
animals to self-administer cocaine more readily. Addiction
to nicotine results in withdrawal symptoms when a person
tries to stop smoking. For example, a study found that when
chronic smokers were deprived of cigarettes for 24 hours,
they had increased anger, hostility, and aggression, and
loss of social cooperation. Persons suffering from
withdrawal also take longer to regain emotional equilibrium
following stress. During periods of abstinence and/or
craving, smokers have shown impairment across a wide range
of psychomotor and cognitive functions, such as language
comprehension.
Women who smoke
generally have earlier menopause. If women smoke cigarettes
and also take oral contraceptives, they are more prone to
cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases than are other
smokers; this is especially true for women older than 30.
Pregnant women
who smoke cigarettes run an increased risk of having
stillborn or premature infants or infants with low
birth-weight. Children of women who smoked while pregnant
have an increased risk for developing conduct disorders.
National studies of mothers and daughters have also found
that maternal smoking during pregnancy increased the
probability that female children would smoke and would
persist in smoking.
Adolescent
smokeless tobacco users are more likely than nonusers to
become cigarette smokers. Behavioral research is beginning
to explain how social influences, such as observing adults
or other peers smoking, affect whether adolescents begin to
smoke cigarettes. Research has shown that teens are
generally resistant to many kinds of anti-smoking messages.
In addition to
nicotine, cigarette smoke is primarily composed of a dozen
gases (mainly carbon monoxide) and tar. The tar in a
cigarette, which varies from about 15 mg for a regular
cigarette to 7 mg in a low-tar cigarette, exposes the user
to a high expectancy rate of lung cancer, emphysema, and
bronchial disorders. The carbon monoxide in the smoke
increases the chance of cardiovascular diseases.
The
Environmental Protection Agency has concluded that
secondhand smoke causes lung cancer in adults and greatly
increases the risk of respiratory illnesses in children and
sudden infant death.
What is its
federal classification?
Tobacco is a
legal product for adults.
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