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Release Date: Dec. 15, 2003
MOST POPULAR SNUFF BRANDS
ALSO HAVE BIG NICOTINE DOSES
By Becky Ham, Science Writer Health Behavior News Service
The most popular brands of smokeless tobacco also contain the highest
amounts of nicotine that can be readily absorbed by the body, according to
a new study.
Moist
snuff brands that have the highest market share, like Skoal, Copenhagen
and Kodiak, contained high amounts of unprotonated or “free-base” nicotine,
researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report in
the December issue of Nicotine & Tobacco Research.
The most popular brand of loose-leaf smokeless tobacco, Levi Garrett,
also had the highest levels of free-base nicotine, but the relationship
between market share and nicotine content in loose-leaf tobacco was not
as consistent as with moist snuff.
Smokeless tobacco products with a high percentage of free-base
nicotine can be rapidly absorbed in the mouth, and speed is a “major determinant
of addiction,” says Patricia Richter, Ph.D. Some researchers suggest
the amount of free-base nicotine in snuff and loose-leaf tobacco can be
controlled by manipulating the product’s pH levels.
Tobacco companies are required to report the amount of nicotine in their
smokeless tobacco products to the CDC, but by law this information is kept
confidential as a corporate trade secret. Separate from these reports,
Richter and Francis Spierto, Ph.D., analyzed 18 brands of smokeless tobacco
to determine their free-base nicotine content.
“The purpose of the study was to provide consumers, researchers
and public health officials with information on these levels in popular
smokeless tobacco brands,” Richter explains.
Richter and Spierto sent 18 different brands of moist snuff and loose-leaf
smokeless tobacco from five different companies for testing to a private
and independent lab in Canada. Together the brands represent nearly 91
percent of the market share for moist snuff and 76 percent for loose-leaf
chewing tobacco.
“Consumers need to know that smokeless tobacco products, including
loose-leaf and moist snuff, are not safe alternatives to smoking,” Richter
says. “The amount of nicotine absorbed per dose from using smokeless
tobacco is greater than the amount of nicotine absorbed from smoking one
cigarette.”
# # #
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Interviews: Contact Patricia Richter at pir1@cdc.gov.
Nicotine & Tobacco Research: Contact Gary E. Swan, Ph.D., at (650) 859-5322.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Director of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
press@cfah.org
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