Nicotine
(C10H14N2) is a naturally occurring liquid
alkaloid. An alkaloid is an organic compound made out of carbon,
hydrogen, nitrogen and sometimes oxygen. These chemicals have potent effects on
the human body. For example, many people regularly enjoy the stimulating effects of another
alkaloid, caffeine, as they quaff a cup or two of coffee in the morning.
Nicotine
normally makes up about 5 percent of a tobacco plant, by weight. Cigarettes
contain 8 to 20 milligrams (mg) of nicotine (depending on the brand), but only
approximately 1 mg is actually absorbed
by your body when you smoke a cigarette.
In low
concentrations (an average cigarette yields about 1 mg of absorbed
nicotine), the substance acts as a stimulant in mammals and is the main factor
responsible for the dependence-forming properties of tobacco smoking.
Nicotine
biosynthesis
Nicotine in
the Body
Bodily
Sensations
The
nervous system determines the countless sensations we feel all over our
bodies every day. How does this work? What causes your leg to feel tingly
when it falls asleep? How do you know when you're about to sneeze? This
activity from Discovery Channel explains how sensations are produced in the body.
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As
with most addictive
substances, humans have devised a number of ways of delivering nicotine to
their bodies. Nicotine readily diffuses
through:
- Skin
- Lungs
- Mucous membranes (such as the lining of your nose or your gums)
Nicotine
moves right into the small blood vessels that line the tissues listed above.
From there, nicotine travels through your bloodstream to the brain, and then is
delivered to the rest of your body.
The
most common (and the most expedient way) to get nicotine and other drugs into
your bloodstream is through inhalation
-- by smoking it. Your lungs are lined by millions of alveoli, the tiny air sacs
where gas exchange occurs. These alveoli
provide an enormous surface area -- 90 times greater than that of your skin --
and thus provide ample access for nicotine and other compounds. Once in your bloodstream, nicotine flows almost
immediately to your brain.
Although nicotine takes a lot of different actions throughout your body, what
it does in the brain is responsible for both the good feelings you get from
smoking, as well as the irritability you feel if you try to quit. Within 10 to 15 seconds of inhaling, most
smokers are in the throes of nicotine's effects.
Nicotine
doesn't stick around your body for too long. It has a half-life of about 60
minutes, meaning that six hours after a cigarette, only about 0.031 mg of the 1
mg of nicotine you inhaled remains in your body.
How
does your body get rid of nicotine? Here's the process:
- About 80 percent of nicotine is broken down to cotinine by enzymes in your liver.
- Nicotine is also metabolized in your lungs to cotinine and nicotine oxide.
- Cotinine and other metabolites are excreted in your urine. Cotinine has a 24-hour half-life, so you can test whether or not someone has been smoking in the past day or two by screening his or her urine for cotinine.
- The remaining nicotine is filtered from the blood by your kidneys and excreted in the urine.
Different
people metabolize nicotine at different rates. Some people even have a genetic defect in the enzymes in their
liver that break down nicotine, whereby the mutant enzyme is much less
effective at metabolizing nicotine than the normal variant. If a person has
this gene, their blood and brain nicotine levels stay higher for longer after
smoking a cigarette. Normally, people keep smoking cigarettes throughout the
day to maintain a steady level of nicotine in their bodies. Smokers with this
gene usually end up smoking many fewer cigarettes, because they don't
constantly need more nicotine.
Effects of
Nicotine
Nicotine
changes how your brain and your body function. The net results are somewhat of
a paradox: Nicotine can both invigorate and relax a smoker, depending on how
much and how often they smoke. This biphasic
effect is not uncommon. Although the actions of nicotine and ethanol in the body are
quite different, you also see dose-dependent effects when you drink alcoholic beverages. Your
first drink may loosen your inhibitions and fire you up, but after several
drinks, you're usually pretty sedate.
Nicotine
initially causes a rapid release of adrenaline,
the "fight-or-flight" hormone. If you've ever jumped in fright at a
scary movie or rushed around the office trying to finish a project by your
deadline, you may be familiar with adrenaline's effects:
- Rapid heartbeat
- Increased blood pressure
- Rapid, shallow breathing
Adrenaline
also tells your body to dump some of its glucose stores into your
blood. This makes sense if you remind yourself that the "fight-or-flight"
response is meant to help you either defend yourself from a hungry predator or
hightail it out of a dangerous situation -- running or brawling both require
plenty of energy to fuel your muscles.
Nicotine
itself may also block the release of the hormone insulin. Insulin tells
your cells to take up excess glucose from your blood. This means that nicotine
makes people somewhat hyperglycemic,
having more sugar than usual in their blood. Some people think that nicotine
also curbs their appetite so that they eat less. This hyperglycemia could be
one explanation why: Their bodies and brain may see the excess sugar and
down-regulate the hormones and other signals that are perceived as hunger.
Nicotine
may also increase your basal metabolic
rate slightly. This means that you burn more calories than you usually
would when you are just sitting around. However, losing weight by smoking doesn't give you any of the
health benefits that you'd get if you were losing weight by exercising
-- it actually does the opposite! Over the long haul, nicotine can increase the
level of the "bad" cholesterol, LDL, that damages your arteries. This makes it more likely that
you could have a heart attack or a stroke.