Nicotine induced haemodynamic changes during cigarette smoking and nicotine gum chewing: a placebo controlled study in young healthy volunteers

Abstract
Because cigarette smoking is a definite risk for the development of cardiovascular disease and nicotine induced vasoconstriction may be a possible pathogenetic factor the haemodynamic effects of smoking cigarettes with high or low nicotine content were compared with those induced by chewing nicotine gum in a placebo controlled, crossover study in six healthy volunteers. The three stimuli induced similar increases in heart rate (about 20%) and systolic blood pressure (about 7%) and a decrease in digital blood flow. Although the mean haemodynamic changes parallelled the mean plasma nicotine concentration increases, no correlation was found between them when the individual values were considered. It is concluded that the nicotine induced haemodynamic changes probably occur as a result of the (local) release of vasoactive mediators such as adrenaline or noradrenaline after a threshold plasma nicotine concentration has been reached. Such a threshold may explain the large interindividual variability in susceptibility to smoking induced cardiovascular diseases.