February 11, 2014

An interesting look at Nicotine

From Scientific American:
Will a Nicotine Patch Make You Smarter?
Back home in New Jersey, I read through dozens of human and animal studies published over the past five years showing that nicotine�freed of its noxious host, tobacco, and delivered instead by chewing gum or transdermal patch�may prove to be a weirdly, improbably effective cognitive enhancer and treatment for relieving or preventing a variety of neurological disorders, including Parkinson�s, mild cognitive impairment, ADHD, Tourette�s, and schizophrenia. Plus it has long been associated with weight loss. With few known safety risks.

Nicotine? Yes, nicotine.

In fact�and this is where the irony gets mad deep�the one purpose for which nicotine patches have proven futile is the very same one for which they are approved by the Food and Drug Administration, sold by pharmacies over the counter, bought by consumers, and covered by many state Medicaid programs: quitting smoking. In January 2012, a six-year follow-up study of 787 adults who had recently quit smoking found that those who used nicotine replacement therapy in the form of a patch, gum, inhaler, or nasal spray had the same long-term relapse rate as those who did not use the products. Heavy smokers who tried to quit without the benefit of counseling were actually twice as likely to relapse if they used a nicotine replacement product.
Curious. Posted by DaveH at February 11, 2014 11:47 AM
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