Heavy drinking may make
it harder to quit smoking
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[May 04, 2016]
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) – Alcohol-dependent people
quickly process nicotine in their bodies and that may make it more
difficult to quit smoking, suggests a small study of Polish men.
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“We didn’t measure what was happening when people were drinking, but
after they stopped, their elevated rate of nicotine metabolism
slowly subsided,” said lead author Noah R. Gubner of the Center for
tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of
California, San Francisco.
When nicotine metabolism is higher, people tend to have a harder
time quitting smoking, Gubner told Reuters Health by phone.
If two people are trying to quit smoking and using a nicotine patch,
the person with a faster nicotine metabolism will clear the chemical
from their body faster and feel the desire to smoke again sooner, he
said.
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In 2011 and 2012, the researchers studied 22 white male smokers at
an inpatient alcohol addiction treatment center in Poland. They
analyzed participants' urine samples to gauge nicotine levels and
metabolism at one, four and seven weeks after detoxing from alcohol.
The speed of nicotine processing declined by about half over the
seven-week period, even though the men did not change how many
cigarettes they were smoking per day.
The researchers write in Drug and Alcohol Dependence that heavy
alcohol use may trigger the enzyme in the body primarily responsible
for metabolizing nicotine. And faster nicotine processing could
explain the poor rates of quitting smoking among people who are
alcohol dependent.
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The results might be useful for helping recovering alcoholics quit
smoking, they add. More research is needed to know if nicotine
replacement therapy is more effective after people stop heavy
drinking, however.
Quitting alcohol and quitting smoking are complicated undertakings,
and nicotine and alcohol could have some synergistic effects on
reward and pleasure, Gubner said. Also, heavy drinking can affect
decision-making, including the decision to smoke less or not at all.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1SLaSut Drug and Alcohol Dependence, online
April 14, 2016.
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