Influence of nicotine on cardiovascular and hormonal effects of cigarette smoking
- 1 July 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics
- Vol. 36 (1) , 74-81
- https://doi.org/10.1038/clpt.1984.142
Abstract
To elucidate the importance of nicotine in determining the effects of cigarette smoking, 10 healthy subjects on a research ward who were either smoking their usual brand of cigarettes, smoking high- (HN, 2.5 mg) or low- (LN, 0.4 mg) nicotine research cigarettes or abstaining, were studied. Blood nicotine concentrations were 4 times as high smoking HN than LN cigarettes. Values while smoking their own brands were intermediate. Cigarette smoking increased mean (24-h) heart rate (HR), but HR effect did not differ as a function of nicotine exposure. Analysis of the hourly HR pattern showed that smoking increased HR more over the first few hours of the morning, but then followed a circadian pattern similar to that during abstention. HR remained elevated all night even though no cigarettes were smoked. Blood pressures tended to be higher while smoking, but plasma cortisol concentrations throughout the day did not differ while smoking or abstaining. The amount of nicotine consumed when assessed over the whole day evidently has little influence on magnitude of cardiovascular responses to cigarette smoking. Insofar as nicotine contributes to risk, changing nicotine content per se may not alter the risk of sudden adverse cardiac events associated with cigarette smoking.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Heart Rate and Carbon Monoxide Level After Smoking High-, Low-, and Non-Nicotine CigarettesAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1971