What is nicotine?
Nicotine is a chemical in cigarettes, smokeless (chewing)
tobacco, pipe tobacco, and cigars. It is both a stimulant
and a sedative. It causes both psychological and strong
physical addiction.
What is nicotine dependence?
Nicotine causes both psychological and physical dependence.
Psychological dependence means that you have a strong
emotional need for the drug nicotine. You feel that you
need nicotine to function normally. Physical dependence on
nicotine (addiction to nicotine) means that your body has to
have some nicotine in order to prevent the symptoms of
withdrawal. Nicotine is dangerous because it causes
diseases such as lung cancer, emphysema, heart disease, and
stroke.
How does it occur?
Nicotine affects the brain. It creates pleasure in the
brain, causes a feeling of relaxation, and elevates your
mood. Over time, nicotine keeps your brain from supplying
chemicals that create these good feelings naturally. As a
result, you crave more nicotine and the feelings it
produces. A strong craving for tobacco may last for 6
months or more after you quit. For some people, in addition
to the effect of nicotine, the feel, smell, and sight of a
cigarette and the ritual of handling, lighting, and smoking
cigarettes are very pleasurable. These pleasurable feelings
make withdrawal and cravings worse.
What are the symptoms?
You are dependent on nicotine if you cannot reduce or stop
your use of nicotine even though you know it is hurting you.
When you stop using nicotine, you may have withdrawal
symptoms such as:
- irritability
- shakiness
- trouble concentrating
- trouble sleeping
- increased appetite
- increased craving for nicotine.
How is it treated?
You must give up nicotine. This means stop smoking
cigarettes, cigars, or pipes, or stop chewing tobacco.
Your healthcare provider can prescribe nicotine substitutes
that can almost double your chances of quitting for good.
They include nicotine inhalers, lozenges, nasal sprays, and
patches. A medicine called Zyban (bupropion HCL) may be
prescribed to lessen the craving for nicotine. None of
these treatments is a miracle cure. You still need to learn
to live without cigarettes in your daily life. Joining an
organized quit-smoking program while you are using nicotine
replacements can help you quit.
How can I take care of myself?
There are things you can do you help yourself quit smoking:
- Set a quit date.
- Throw your cigarettes away.
- Join a stop-smoking support group or class.
- Get support from family and friends.
- Spend time with people who don't smoke.
- Start an exercise program.
- Avoid caffeine and alcohol.
- Keep yourself busy.
- Think about using nicotine gum or patches.
- Think about asking your doctor for a prescription
medicine that can help you quit.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2007 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.