|
Nicotine's
Power Over the Brain
The drug has a fierce grip on people who smoke cigarettes
By LUKE
SHOCKMAN
BLADE STAFF WRITER
Gary Bolden calls his decades-long addiction a "horrible nightmare."
"I had to have it every time I sat down and watched TV, anytime I
went to
the bathroom, anytime I was nervous. I had to have it. The cravings were
so
bad," Mr. Bolden said.
It's
not alcohol, heroin, or cocaine Mr. Bolden, 47, is referring to. It's
nicotine.
Nonsmokers
may scoff at the notion that a cigarette can be so powerfully
addictive, and even many smokers will deny nicotine's addictive power.
But
counselors and scientists who study addiction marvel at the iron grip
the
drug has on many of its users.
"I
have had numerous clients in recovery for substance abuse. They've quit
the illegal drugs, but can't quit smoking," said Kathy Gilley, a
Toledo
respiratory therapist and addiction counselor.
Dr. Richard
Hurt knows the power of nicotine firsthand. He's now director of
the Nicotine Dependence Center at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.,
but
as a young physician he was a heavy smoker.
"One
test of addiction we use is how long is the time until the first
cigarette in the morning, and if it's less than 30 minutes, that's
considered [a sign of addiction]," he said. "Well, my routine
in the morning
was I'd wake up, wheel my legs over the bed, and I'd be smoking before
my
feet hit the floor. The only place I never smoked was in the shower."
Dr. Hurt
said the reason nicotine is so addictive is the way it's delivered.
He said smoking a cigarette is the most effective drug delivery system
ever
developed, with nicotine reaching a smoker's brain within five heart beats
after inhalation. Smoking is even more effective than injecting nicotine
intravenously, he said.
"If
you could inhale alcohol it would be just as addicting," he said.
"It's
all in the delivery system."
Only
a small fraction of those who drink become alcoholics, but because
smoking delivers nicotine in such an efficient way, "the vast majority
of
regular smokers are addicted," Dr. Hurt said.
Dr. Hurt
has since managed to quit smoking - which statistically speaking is
quite an achievement. Only two percent of smokers who try quitting cold
turkey successfully quit, and the average quit rate for smokers who use
counseling, nicotine patches, or other therapies averages from 20 to 40
percent. Most smokers need repeated attempts before they're able to quit,
he
said.
Dr. Hurt
said most nonsmokers have no idea just how powerful nicotine can
be, which often causes hurt feelings between smokers and nonsmokers.
"Nicotine
addiction is a biological phenomenon. This is not somebody's weak
will," he said. "It has nothing to do with intelligence, some
of the
smartest people on Earth are smokers."
What
Dr. Hurt didn't know as a young physician, but knows now is that
nicotine physically changes the brains of smokers. Everyone's brain, even
nonsmokers, has nicotine receptors. But after steady exposure to nicotine
in
cigarette smoke, the brain begins to change by increasing the number of
nicotine receptors. That's one reason it can be so difficult to quit:
Those
extra receptors demand to be satisfied, placing enormous pressure and
cravings on the smoker.
"Once
you bathe the brain cells with these very high concentrations of
nicotine, the receptors in the brain change. You end up with more of them,
then it's a matter of feeding the little critters," Dr. Hurt said.
Dr. Neal
Benowitz, leader of the Tobacco Control Program at the University
of California, San Francisco, said addiction is either amplified or weakened
by genetics. Some people are more prone to become addicted to nicotine,
he
said, with studies of identical twins bearing this out.
But what
affects all smokers beside just the physical addiction are the cues
that go along with smoking: Having a drink while smoking, having a cigarette
after eating, smoking and driving.
"These
situations are paired thousands of times with smoking and after
awhile it becomes very strong," Dr. Benowitz said.
Dr. Hurt
said when smokers who are trying to quit are presented with cues
like this, it can trigger cravings months, even years, later.
"Often,
they'll go to a party and say, 'I'll just have one,'" Dr. Hurt said.
"Then the brain says, 'Whoa, we've been missing you a lot, let's
have
another one.'"
That's
why he reminds smokers and former smokers never to underestimate
nicotine.
"Patients
must understand they've been biologically altered," he said. "It's
not that they're a bad person. Their brains have changed, and they've
been
changed forever."
Dr. Hurt
said just one relapse can almost instantly re-activate the
plentiful, yet dormant, nicotine receptors in the brain.
Ms. Gilley
has seen examples of this. One of her patients was a school
superintendent who once smoked but had quit 17 years ago. Out for a drink
with co-workers, she mentioned she used to smoke and they didn't believe
her. They asked her to prove it so she had one cigarette.
"On
the way home, she bought a pack. She smoked again for six more years,"
Ms. Gilley said.
Seeing
and hearing stories like that prompted Ms. Gilley to switch from a
career as respiratory therapist to addiction counselor.
"I
was watching my patients die for 35 years and it was driving me crazy,"
she said.
Today,
she tries to get smokers to quit before they've already passed the
point of no return - lung cancer or other deadly diseases. She admits
it's a
challenge.
"I
work with people on oxygen," she said. "And those are the people
who've
cut back from four packs to two packs a day. These are drug addicts. They
hate hearing that, but that's what they are."
And many
of them start young.
I have
one young man who started smoking at the age of 4," she said. "He
stole his father's lit cigarettes out of an ash tray, and he's smoked
a pack
a day since the fourth grade."
Dr. Benowitz
said cigarette companies have long known that more than 80
percent of all smokers start before the age of 18. He and others point
to
once-secret tobacco industry documents that have surfaced in lawsuits
against the companies over the last decade. Some records speak of young
teen-agers as "tomorrow's potential regular smokers."
Dr. Benowitz
said mixing nicotine addiction and teens is dangerous.
"Teen-agers
under-estimate the addictiveness of nicotine," he said. "Kids
today are well-educated about the risks of smoking, and if you ask them
what
they intend to do they say, 'Well, I just want to smoke with my friends,
but
I can quit.' But if you interview those same kids six years later, most
are
smoking much more."
Dr. Hurt
said tobacco companies have long known how powerful nicotine is,
and he also pointed to the once-secret tobacco industry documents. One
from
the 1960s notes that: "we can't defend smoking as a free choice if
the
person is addicted." Others outline how company scientists had discovered
that by adding ammonia to tobacco it would increase the rate at which
nicotine is absorbed by the brain, thus making cigarettes more addictive.
Dr. Hurt,
as well as Dr. Benowitz and Ms. Gilley, said though nicotine is
difficult to kick once addicted, it can be done. Repeated attempts are
common, and smokers shouldn't get discouraged.
Just
ask Mr. Bolden. The Toledo man, after seeking help from Ms. Gilley,
hasn't smoked a cigarette in almost two years. He said if he can do it,
anyone can. He smoked three packs a day and couldn't walk with his
grandchildren because he'd get out of breath.
"Now
I can walk the whole [Toledo] Zoo with my grandkids without stopping,"
he said. "As a matter of fact, the kids were sitting down tired and
I wanted
to walk some more. I feel like a young man again. I got another chance."
^Top
of Page^
|