What Is Nicotine? |
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Nicotine, one of more than 4,000 chemicals found in the smoke from
Tobacco products such as cigarettes, cigars, and pipes, is the primary
component in tobacco that acts on the brain. Smokeless tobacco products
such as snuff and chewing tobacco also contain many toxins as well as
high levels of nicotine. Cigarette smoking is the most prevalent form of nicotine Addiction in the United States. Most cigarettes in the U.S. market today contain 10 milligrams (mg) or more of nicotine. Through inhaling smoke, the average smoker takes in 1 to 2 mg nicotine per cigarette. There have been substantial increases in the sale and consumption of smokeless tobacco products also, and more recently, in cigar sales. Nicotine is absorbed through the skin and mucosal lining of the mouth and nose or by inhalation in the lungs. Depending on how tobacco is taken, nicotine can reach peak levels in the bloodstream and brain rapidly. Cigarette smoking, for example, results in rapid distribution of nicotine throughout the body, reaching the brain within 10 seconds of inhalation. Cigar and pipe smokers, on the other hand, typically do not inhale the smoke, so nicotine is absorbed more slowly through the mucosal membranes of their mouths. Nicotine from smokeless tobacco also is absorbed through the mucosal membranes.
Source: National Institute on Drug abuse Toll Free: 888-9NO-DRUGS or 888-966-3784
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