Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Health

E-cigarettes may open addiction to marijuana, cocaine

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Sep, 2014 08:21 AM
    Assumed by many as a safe alternative to cigarette smoking, electronic cigarettes or e-cigarettes as they are popularly called may, in fact, promote use and addiction to illicit drugs, says a study.
     
    E-cigarettes may function as a "gateway drug" - a drug that lowers the threshold for addiction to other substances such as marijuana and cocaine, the findings showed.
     
    "While e-cigarettes do eliminate some of the health effects associated with combustible tobacco, they are pure nicotine-delivery devices," said co-author Denise Kandel, professor from the Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) in the US.
     
    "Nicotine clearly acts as a gateway drug on the brain and this effect is likely to occur whether the exposure comes from smoking cigarettes, passive tobacco smoke or e-cigarettes," said co-author Eric Kandel, who is also a professor at CUMC.
     
    E-cigarettes have been touted as a tool to curtail the use of conventional cigarettes and reduce the harmful health effects of combustible tobacco.
     
    But in the light of the skyrocketing popularity of e-cigarettes, particularly among adolescents and young adults, the researchers said that more effective prevention programmes need to be developed for all products that contain nicotine.
     
    "Our findings provided a biologic basis for the sequence of drug use observed in people," Eric Kandel noted.
     
    "One drug alters the brain's circuitry in a way that enhances the effects of a subsequent drug," he added.
     
    The researchers reviewed Denise Kandel's earlier work on the gateway hypothesis and on the role of nicotine as a gateway drug, reported in a paper published in the journal Science in l975.
     
    The current study appeared online in the New England Journal of Medicine.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Erotic thoughts key to female orgasm: Study

    Erotic thoughts key to female orgasm: Study
    Women who miss on orgasm should focus more on their their bodily sensations during intercourse and try to have more erotic thoughts during the act...

    Erotic thoughts key to female orgasm: Study

    Walking speed may detect Alzheimer's risk

    Walking speed may detect Alzheimer's risk
    How fast people walk and whether they have memory complaints can help predict dementia early, researchers have found....

    Walking speed may detect Alzheimer's risk

    Night lights can wake up breast cancer cells

    Night lights can wake up breast cancer cells
    Sleeping at night with the lights on can not only add to your energy consumption, but also wake up breast cancer cells, a study suggests....

    Night lights can wake up breast cancer cells

    Virus linked to obesity and diabetes found

    Virus linked to obesity and diabetes found
    Biologists have discovered an extremely widespread virus that could be as old as humans and could play a major role in obesity and diabetes...

    Virus linked to obesity and diabetes found

    Men in shift work at higher type 2 diabetes risk: Study

    Men in shift work at higher type 2 diabetes risk: Study
    The reasons for this finding are not clear, say the authors, but suggest that men working shift patterns might need to pay more attention to the possible health...

    Men in shift work at higher type 2 diabetes risk: Study

    How malaria parasite resists key trial drug

    How malaria parasite resists key trial drug
    Researchers have uncovered a way the malaria parasite becomes resistant to a key clinical trial drug....

    How malaria parasite resists key trial drug