Study: Nicotine Levels May Be Manipulated
A study found that some brands of cigarettes deliver a much more powerful
nicotine ``kick'' than others, adding to suspicions that manufacturers
deliberately blend tobacco to boost the addictive effect.
Smoke from 11 brands of cigarettes was analyzed for a specific form of nicotine
called ``free base'' that passes quickly into the bloodstream when it is
inhaled.
American Spirit, a brand owned by R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., topped the
list. It was followed by the French brand Gauloises Brunes, according to
the study by Oregon Health & Science University chemist James F. Pankow. Their
free-nicotine levels were around 25 to 35 times higher than those of the
lowest-level cigarettes.
The free-base form of nicotine occurs naturally, but some varieties of tobacco
contain far more than others.
The study adds weight to claims that cigarette makers blend tobacco varieties to
manipulate the nicotine potency and boost sales, as some industry critics have
charged. The tobacco industry has long claimed that it blends tobacco to adjust
for taste, not to increase nicotine potency.
Acid levels in nicotine largely determine how quickly it can be absorbed.
Free-base nicotine is much less acidic than other forms and thus gets to the
brain more quickly.
Previous studies had measured the acid levels in cigarette smoke to indirectly
test for free-base nicotine. Pankow's was the first to directly test for the
chemical, according to Neal Benowitz, a nicotine addiction expert at the
University of California at San Francisco.
Pankow's study measured the first three puffs, which typically pack the biggest
nicotine punch. His artificial inhaler smoked the cigarettes down to a roughly
one-inch butt.
The nicotine delivered by American Spirits was 29 percent free-base nicotine in
the first three puffs, and 36 percent for the rest - an exception to the general
rule that the first puffs are stronger, the study showed.
Gauloises Brunes delivered an even dose of 25 percent free-base nicotine
throughout the smoke.
The GPC brand made by Brown and Williamson had the lowest dose of free-base
nicotine at 1.6 percent for the first puffs and 1 percent for the rest of the
cigarette.
The study was published in the online version of the journal Chemical Research
in Toxicology at http://pubs.acs.org/journals/crtoec/index.html