Nicotine
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== Quitting the Puff == | == Quitting the Puff == | ||
Revision as of 07:50, 20 October 2009
Nicotine is an alkaloid found in the nightshade family of plants, predominantly in tobacco. An alkaloid is an organic compound made up of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen and sometimes oxygen (nicotine contains no oxygen). Coffee is another example of an alkaloid, also a stimulant, which explains why coffee-drinkers are addicted to it! Tomato, potato and eggplant also contain nicotine but in lower quantities. Nicotine constitutes 0.3 to 5% of the tobacco plant by dry weight and is a powerful neurotoxin. In fact, it was widely used as an insecticide in the past. As it is a powerful stimulant, it has dependence-forming properties which make tobacco smoking a tough habit to kick. According to the American Heart Association nicotine addiction has, historically, been one of the toughest addictions to break.
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Contents |
Quitting the Puff
The effects of nicotine on the human body are both physiological and psychological. Regular smokers use it compulsively, irrespective of its negative effects on health. Anything that turns on the reward pathway in the brain is defined by neuroscientists as ‘addictive.’ Pleasurable feelings make the smoker crave more of the experience.
A smoker becomes tolerant to nicotine’s effects over time so he needs to smoke many more cigarettes to reach the same degree of stimulation or relaxation.
What happens when a regular smoker quits? While you’re smoking, your body adapts the way it works to compensate for the effects of the nicotine. For eg. neurons in your brain may increase or decrease the number of receptors or the amount of different neurotransmitters affected by the nicotine. When nicotine is abruptly withdrawn from the body, these physical adaptations still remain. The result is that your body cannot function the same way in the absence of the drug as it did before. Anxiety, irritability, depression and craving are side-effects of the withdrawal. It would take about a month for these symptoms to fade away, the toughest period for the smoker who is trying to kick the habit. That is why many smokers revert to the habit barely a week after attempting to quit and a mere 10% are successful in giving up.
Tips to quit smoking
- Quit cold turkey – this has proven successful for many a diehard smoker. Just wake up one morning and say you’re not going to smoke a single cigarette that day. Days turn into weeks and weeks into months and soon the demonic urge releases its hold on you.
- Work your mouth in other ways. Pop a candy, chew gum, or drink root beer. Just don’t light up.
- Use motivation. Keep a daily journal. Log in every day you’ve managed not to smoke. This should serve as motivation, and proof that you can do it – one day at a time.
- The audio tape method. There are several audio tapes that help you quit smoking. Listen to a tape for 10 minutes every day and gradually the words start to sink into your subconscious and release deeply-embedded messages about why you need that smoke.
- Be prepared for those ‘craving sessions.’ The first two weeks are the worst. Mentally ready yourself for those difficult times but stay committed to your resolve not to light up.
Did You Know?
- Every 10 seconds a person dies from tobacco-related causes.
- The average age when people start smoking is 15, and becomes a daily smoker by age 18
- Cigarettes are the most littered item in the world and toxic residue contained in cigarette buds get released into the environment and water supply.
- Smoking costs the U.S. approximately $97.2 billion each year in health-care costs and lost productivity. 6
- Smoking is directly responsible for 87% of lung cancer cases and causes most cases of emphysema and chronic bronchitis
- Every year, 77.4 million packs of cigarettes are bought or smoked by youth.
- Secondhand smoke has more toxins than inhaled smoke.
- Long-term smokers are as likely to die as a direct result of using tobacco as from all other potential causes of death combined. 3
- Smoking a pack of cigarettes a day adds up to about 7,500 cigarettes a year. A person with a 20 year habit — 150,000 cigarettes
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