Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Nicotine digestion shows best method to kick the butt

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Jan, 2015 10:10 AM
  • Nicotine digestion shows best method to kick the butt
Paving the way for tailor-made treatments to stop smoking, researchers have shown that finding out how quickly smokers break down nicotine in their bodies is the key to helping them quit.
 
"Our findings show that matching a treatment based on the rate at which smokers metabolise (break down) nicotine could be a viable clinical strategy to help individual smokers choose the cessation method that will work best for them," said co-lead author Caryn Lerman, professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania in the US.
 
A simple blood test could point out how fast smokers break down nicotine, the researchers said.
 
Smokers crave nicotine when their body's nicotine levels drop. However, different people metabolise nicotine at different rates.
 
Nicotine levels in the body drop more quickly in normal metabolisers (60 percent of smokers in the population) so they are more likely to smoke more and find it harder to quit.
 
The researchers compared the efficacy of a non-nicotine based drug called varenicline with that of a nicotine patch.
 
They found that normal metabolisers of nicotine have better quit rates with the non-nicotine replacement therapy drug varenicline.
 
Although varenicline was just as effective as nicotine patches at helping slow metabolisers to quit, the former reported more overall side-effects with the drug.
 
The study involved 1,246 smokers who wanted to quit.
 
"Our data suggests treating normal metabolisers with varenicline and slow metabolisers with the nicotine patch," co-lead author Rachel Tyndale, from the University of Toronto, in Canada, added.
 
"What is more, it is feasible that a point-of-care blood test to measure the rate at which nicotine is metabolised could be developed and implemented in clinical practice," Tyndale said.
 
The study was published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine journal.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Heart exercises protect your brain too

Heart exercises protect your brain too
Daily exercises to maintain good cardiovascular health also benefits brain, protecting us from cognitive impairment as we age, according to a promising study....

Heart exercises protect your brain too

Healthy diet key to boosting immunity as you age

Healthy diet key to boosting immunity as you age
While attempting to find why immunity decreases with age leading to life-threatening diseases, researchers have cracked how to rejuvenate ageing immune cells....

Healthy diet key to boosting immunity as you age

Adopt healthy habits to maintain youthful looks

Adopt healthy habits to maintain youthful looks
Growing older means becoming settled in career and personal life, but it also takes away our youthful looks. Wear sunscreen, eat well and get sufficient...

Adopt healthy habits to maintain youthful looks

Low nicotine cigarettes may reduce smoking addiction

Low nicotine cigarettes may reduce smoking addiction
Cigarettes with low levels of nicotine may reduce addiction in smokers without increasing exposure to toxic chemicals, says a study....

Low nicotine cigarettes may reduce smoking addiction

Fitness app games no substitute for actual exercise

Fitness app games no substitute for actual exercise
There are nearly 31,000 health and fitness apps in the market and most of them use games to increase physical activity. Are they a real substitute...

Fitness app games no substitute for actual exercise

Mobile phones cause changes in metabolism

Mobile phones cause changes in metabolism
Mobile phones are certainly causing some changes in the human body's metabolism unlike claims made by cellular operators, medical experts have said...

Mobile phones cause changes in metabolism