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Release Date: 00:01 Tuesday 12 September 2000 UK Time
Contact: Dr. Joseph DiFranza
(508)
856-5658
joe.difranza@banyan.ummed.edu
Nicotine Addiction Can Start Within A Few Days And After Just A Few
Cigarettes
The first symptoms of nicotine addiction can start within a few days of starting to
smoke and after just a few cigarettes, shows a study in Tobacco Control. The
research explodes the commonly held belief that nicotine dependence is a gradual process
which occurs after prolonged daily cigarette smoking.
The research team monitored almost 700 teenagers between the ages of 12 and 13 from
seven schools in central Massachusetts throughout 1998. The teenagers were interviewed in
considerable detail on three separate occasions about their smoking habits. The time it
took before the first symptoms of nicotine dependence appeared was assessed.
Of the 95 teenagers who said they were occasional smokers, symptoms of nicotine
dependence were evident within four weeks of starting to smoke in one in five; 16
developed symptoms within two weeks. Several said their symptoms had started within a few
days.
Almost two-thirds of the smokers had one or more symptoms of nicotine dependence, and
of these, almost two-thirds said that they had their first symptom before they began
smoking every day or that the symptoms had made them start smoking every day. Feeling
addicted was the most common initial symptom, while cravings, irritability, nervousness,
and anxiety when unable to smoke were the most commonly reported symptoms overall.
Other research has shown that the numbers of nicotine receptors in the brain increase
rapidly after just the second dose of nicotine, say the authors, who suggest that there
may be three distinct groups of smokers: those who become addicted very quickly -- akin to
"love at first sight", those in whom the process is more gradual and who require
exposure to higher doses, and "chippers" -- people who can smoke five cigarettes
a day with no evidence of addiction.
Contact:
Dr. Joseph DiFranza, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of
Massachusetts, Worcester. Tel: (508) 856-5658; Fax: (508) 856-1212; e-mail: joe.difranza@banyan.ummed.edu.
[Initial symptoms of nicotine dependence in adolescents. Tobacco Control, 2000;
9: 313-19]
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For further information about Tobacco Control or to obtain a copy
of the article, please contact Public Affairs Division, British Medical Association, BMA
House, Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9JP, Tel: 020 7383 6254 or e-mail:
pressoffice@bma.org.uk. After 6 p.m. and on weekends telephone: +44 (0)208 241 6386 / +44
(0)208 997 3653/+44 (0)208 674 6294 / +44 (0)1525 379792 / +44 (0)208 651 5130.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Information Services Manager
202.387.2829
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