The Smokes  The Process  The Doctor  The Mission Statement 
Home
Bravo Synopsis
Clinical Study
Condensed Study
Testimonials
Alternative Comparison
Order Form
Contact Us




Download Free Screen Saver
Tobacco cigarette smoking and patellar reflex depression

One hundred fifteen young men served as subjects to determine the effects of smoking cigarettes of differing nicotine content on the patellar reflex. Each volunteer smoked 2 of the same kind of cigarettes in a 4 minute period with an interval of 25 minutes between. The patellar reflex was elicited automatically every 2 seconds by a reflex hammer attached to a solenoid. The reflex was recorded with the use of a strain gauge transducer and the electromyogram of the ipsilateral quadriceps femoris muscle. A negligible depression was produced by smoking a nicotine-free lettuce cigarette. A low-nicotine tobacco cigarette showed approximately 45 per cent depression within 5 minutes compared with a 67 per cent depression after smoking a high-nicotine cigarette. The depression caused by the second cigarette was comparable in degree and duration to the effect of the first cigarette. No accumulative or tachyphylactic effect was observed. It is concluded that tobacco smoking produces a remarkable, short-term depression of the human skeletal-motor system. The depression of the patellar reflex seems to be related to the nicotine content of the cigarette smoked.

Edward F. Domino, M.S., M.D., and Alona M. von Baumgarten, M.D.* Ann Arbor, and Detroit, Mich.

Michigan Neuropsychophartnacology Research Program, Department of Pharmacology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and Lafayette Clinic, Detroit

The report of the Advisory Committee to the Surgeon General of the United States Public Health Service on "Smoking and Health" summarizes evidence on this controversial subjects There is no general agreement as to why some people continue to smoke. Surely it must be because of various complex pharmacological and psychological reinforcements. As neuropsychopharmacologists, our own bias prompts us to seek various pharmacological reinforcements of tobacco smoking, especially those related to the central nervous system. For some time we have been concerned with delineating the central actions of nicotine and tobacco smoking in animals. These studies have convinced us that some of the most important actions of small amounts of nicotine as present in tobacco smoke are on the central nervous system.

Although much is known about the actions of nicotine on the central nervous system of animals, relatively little is knowvn about the central effects of tobacco smoking in human beings, Marked cardiovascular and gastrointestinal effects have been reported. The effects of nicotine and smoking on the human central nervous system are much less defined. Inasmuch as nicotine produces a dramatic reduction of the patellar reflex of animals, probably as a result of a direct action of the central nervous systems it would be of considerable interest to know if this pharmacological effect can be produced in man by small doses of nicotine as absorbed during cigarette smoking. Clark and Rand2 have shown that the human patellar reflex is depressed by cigarette smoking. In their study, cigarette smoking had a much more pronounced effect in nonsmokers and light smokers than in heavy smokers. Smoking cigarettes containing an amount of nicotine comparable to commercial cigarettes (2.1 per cent) inhibited the patellar reflex in a significantly greater number of subjects than did smoking cigarettes with a low nicotine content (0.1 per cent). An independent unpublished observation, by one of us some time ago, that tobacco smoking had a profound effect in reducing electromyograin artifact during electrical recordings of brain wave activity in anxious patients, prompted us to undertake a systematic study of the effects of tobacco smoking on skeletal muscle tone. It has been reported that cigarette smoking causes a dramatic but transient reduction in skeletal muscle tone in spastic patients. In view of the fact that the human patellar reflex is easily elicited and measured, it seemed an ideal end point for determining at least one major effect of tobacco smoking. This article reports some of the results obtained with Dermal volunteers who smoked cigarettes of varying nicotine content.

 

Methods

Subjects. The experiments were performed on 115 healthy men between 17 and 29 years of age. All of them were asked not to smoke for 12 hours before the experiment. Those who did not comply were excluded from testing. The subjects were classified as nonsmokers, light smokers (1-3 cigarettes a day), moderate smokers (3-20 cigarettes a day), and heavy smokers (more than 20 cigarettes a day). In 17 cases the same subject was investigated on 3 different days in which a cigarette of different nicotine content was used in a random fashion. The rest of the subjects were tested with only one type of cigarette. Prior to the study a complete medical examination was given to exclude subjects with physical or mental abnormalities. Four subjects were rejected because of hyporeflexia. Subjects taking drugs within 2 weeks of the experimental sessions were also excluded. The experiments were carried out in the morning. Most of the subjects had breakfast several hours before the experiment.

Experimental procedure. The experiment consisted in smoking 2 cigarettes with an interval of 25 minutes between. The patellar reflex was elicited with a mechanical rubber-tipped hammer and monitored before, during, and after smoking by recording simultaneously the isometric contraction with a Grass Model FT 10 strain gauge and the electromyogram of the quadriceps muscle by surface electrodes attached to the overlying skin. An Offner polygraph was used for recording.

Three different cigarettes with varying nicotine content were used. These were lettuce cigarettes which contain no nicotine and tobacco cigarettes with a nicotine content of 0.80 and 1.69 mg. per cigarettes In the beginning of the experimental series before nicotine-free cigarettes were available, sham smoking was performed by taking puffs from an unlighted cigarette or by inhaling it through a cotton-filled glass tube. A typical experiment consisted of a control period of 10 minutes during which the subject relaxed in horizontal position with the use of pillows to make him as comfortable as possible. Smoking was started after 10 minutes or later, when steady patellar reflex responses were obtained. The subject was advised to smoke each cigarette in a series of deep inhaling puffs within a period of 4 minutes. Each cigarette was smoked to approximately 2.5 cm. butt length, The second cigarette was smoked 25 minutes after the first.

The patellar reflex was elicited mechanically every 2 seconds. The hammer exerted a pressure of about 0.5 Kg. upon hitting the patellar tendon. The knee joint was flexed to about 90 degrees during the resting state. The distal part of the lower leg was connected by a chain to the strain gauge. The surface electromyogam was recorded bipolarly with Grass electroencephalogram electrodes. One electrode was placed above the quadriceps muscle in the middle of the upper leg, the other one was placed 1 cm. proximal to the patella. The ground electrode was placed in the middle. An A.C. differential amplifier with a time constant of 0.1 msec. and 100 microvolts per centimeter amplitude was used.

Evaluation of data. Since the amplitude of the patellar reflex showed marked individual variation, all data were transformed as percentage of control. Only experiments in which a steady state of reflex responding, was maintained for at least 5 minutes before tobacco smoking were included in these studies.

 

Results

General observations. At the beginning of the experiment, marked variability of the patellar reflex was observed. With time, as the subject relaxed, a more constant reflex amplitude was obtained. Frequently, slight habituation or accommodation of reflex activity was observed. Several subjects showed an actual increment during the first 10 minutes of recording. The experiments with sham smoking and with nicotine-free cigarettes revealed that when a steady state was reached within the first 15 minutes no further habituation or accommiodation appeared during the following 60 minutes of reflex recording.

The amplitude of the electromyogram of the quadriceps femoris was highly correlated with the amplitude of the mechanical response. Alteration of the respiratory pattern when smoking started led to slight changes in reflex activity. In most cases, an early slight facilitation of the patellar reflex was observed beginning almost immediately after smoking. This facilitation appeared irrespective of sham smoking, smoking nicotine-free cigarettes or smoking nicotine-containing cigarettes. However, the facilitation was quite variable. Some individuals showed an early slight depression instead. The mean of 20 cases showed, an increase of about 11 per cent reflex activity during the first 15 seconds after beginning smoking.

Subjects who smoked nicotine-containing cigarettes invariably obtained a marked depression of the patellar reflex as recorded mechanically, as well as in the electroniyographic response as illustrated in Fig. 1. A portion of the actual record from a typical subject is shown to illustrate the response to 2 types of cigarettes. Following a nicotine-containing cigarette, depression of the patellar reflex was observed about 30 seconds after the initial facilitation (if there was any). The depression of the patellar reflex was progressive and reached its peak at the end of smoking. The depression was always steeper during the first minute than during the last 3 minutes of smoking.

After smoking, the depression remained at the same level or increased slightly for a period of 30 to 120 seconds. Following this period of depression, progressive recovery was observed. The curve of recovery was steeper within the first 10 minutes than later. Twenty-five minutes after the end of smoking, the reflex response in all but one case returned toward control levels.

When full recovery was obtained the subject was asked to smoke a second cigarette of the same nicotine content. The induced depression of the patellar reflex quickly reappeared and resembled closely the depression following the first cigarette. The mean data of all subjects is illustrated in Figs. 2 and 3 and Table 1.

Marked mean differences in the depression of the patellar reflex were found according to the nicotine content of the cigarettes smoked. Nicotine-free cigarettes caused no more depression than that of normal habituation of the reflex during sham smoking. Cigarettes with a nicotine content of 0.80 mg. produced about 45 per cent depression of the patellar reflex. Cigarettes with a nicotine content of 1.69 mg. produced 67 per cent depression of normal.

In view of the fact that heavy smokers show tolerance to nicotine, it was of interest to determine the differential effects of smoking high nicotine-containing cigarettes on non- and heavy smokers. Fifteen nonsmokers were chosen on the basis that they could inhale. Most of them had smoked but stopped for at least 6 months to as long as 3 years previously. Seven smokers were chosen on the basis they smoked one pack or more of cigarettes per day and were able to stop smoking 12 hours prior to the experiment. The mean depression of the patellar reflex + SE for each group of subjects was determined. Occasionally nonsmokers were observed who showed a greater depression of their patellar reflex after the first cigarette, but this was not a constant finding for all of them. The heavy smokers, deprived of cigarettes for 12 hours, tended to show a greater depression of their patellar reflex than the nonsmokers. The reason for this was not apparent but might be related to the fact they inhaled much better. Further studies are now in progress to elucidate this phenomenon. There was no evidence that these deprived heavy smokers were more resistant to high nicotine-containing cigarettes.

Side effects. Twenty-nine of the 115 subjects complained about slight to moderate dizziness during smoking. Most of these were nonsmokers, but even some of the habitual smokers felt uneasy because the deep smoke inhalations in a relatively short period of time were somewhat unusual.

 

Back To Table Of Contents

 

Cigarette Nicotine Content as a Determinant of Human Smoking Behavior

T.L. GOLDFARB, M. E. JARVIK, and S. D. GLICK

Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York

Received October 7, 1969

Summary. Measures of smoking rate and psychological effects of cigarettes with varying nicotine content are made in 15 subjects. While subjects did perceive differences in strength and quality of the experimental letttice cigarettes as compared to their own brands, their smoking rates did not decrease differentially over the nicotine gradient. The decrement in smoking due to the experimental cigarettes persisted when subjects resumed smoking their own cigarettes. However, the smoking that did occur in the absence of both tobacco and nicotine indicates that the habit itself often exhibits functional autonomy from the physiological effects of nicotine.

The possibility that there is something in tobacco which is rewarding has been entertained ever since smoking was known. Since the discovery, more than a century ago, that the most powerful pharmacologicol component of tobacco was nicotine, the view has often been expressed that people who use tobacco are seeking the physiological effects of this alkaloid.

Many studies have investigated the psychological and sociological theories of smoking motivation, but few studies have attempted to demonstrate that nicotine or some other component of tobacco is a prime incentive. While Johnston (1942) and Lucchesi et al. (1967) found that intravenous administration of nicotine did influence human smoking behavior, only Finnegan et al. (1945) and Herxheimer et al. (1967) studied the effects of actual cigarette smoking using varying nicotine content as an experimental variable. Finnegan et al. concluded from psychological reports that some subjects did notice differences in nicotine content, and Herxheimer et al. determined that cigarettes of different nicotine content did indeed produce varied physiological reactions. These physiological effects, however, did not prove to be the sole determinant of smoking behavior, since Finnegan's study showed little correlation between tile number of cigarettes smoked daily and each subject's psychological report of being satisfied or dissatisfied with low nicotine cigarettes.

 

The present study was designed as a further test of the hypothesis that nicotine content of cigarettes is an important factor in smoking. Subjects' baseline smoking rate with their own brands of cigarettes was compared to their rates when smoking specially prepared lettuce cigarettes varying in nicotine content from zero to 2..2.5 mg nicotine per cigarette. At the game time, comparisons were made of psychological measures of satisfaction from their own brands versus the experimental cigarettes. In this way, the present study attempted to evaluate the relationship between smokers' perceived effects of cigarettes and the physiological effects of varying amounts of nicotine.

Material and Method

Fifteen paid volunteers participated in this study. They ranged in age from 20 to 43 and each had been smoking it least one package of cigarettes per day for two years or more.

The subjects were divided into three groups of five members. During the first week of the study, all subjects smoked their own brands of cigarettes. A prepared card was supplied to be stored in each package of cigarettes smoked, thus facilitating accurate record keeping. For each cigarette, the time and day it was smoked was noted along with two psychological ratings of the effect of that particular cigarette. "Strength" was measured on a continuum of 0 (very weak) to 4 (extremely strong); "quality" was rated from 0 (great satisfaction) to 4 (extreme dissatisfaction). At the end of the week, these cards were collected along with a form on which each subject summarized his psychological reaction to the entire weeks smoking.

In each of the three following weeks, subjects received one of three types of experimental cigarettes: 1. "regular" lettuce cigarettes (non-nicotine), 2. lettuce cigarettes to which 2% of nicotine had been added (1.26 mg/nicotine/cigarette) and 3. lettuce cigarettes with 3% nicotinic added (2.25 mg/nicotine/cigarette). All subjects smoked each type of cigarette for one week, however, the three groups received the varieties in different order to control for possible interaction effects and time factors. At the beginning of each experimental week, subjects received an envelope containing 2 cartons of the prepared cigarettes in white unmarked packages. They were instructed to smoke as many cigarettes as they wished each day, but not to smoke any other brand. They were told to keep a careful record of their smoking on the card forms and to complete their subjective summary at the end of the week.

In the fifth, and last, week of the study, all subjects again smoked their own brands and completed the rating forms, as they had in the first week.

 

Results

The Table represents the mean number of cigarettes smoked by each subject during each of the experiment weeks, and also summarizes the mean smoking rates for each group as compared with the psychological ratings of strength and quality. It should be noted that four subjects dropped out of the experiment during the second week when they were required to begin smoking the experimental cigarettes. Fortunately, these dropouts occured fairly evenly such that four subjects remained in groups 1 and 3, and three subjects remained in group 2.

As may be seen in this table, all groups showed a general decrease in smoking rate for al types of experimental cigarettes, as compared to the first weeks rate with their own brands. Since no significant differences were found in rates of smoking, the three experimental cigarettes, the data is presented according to the order in which each group received the three varieties. Thus, the tendency may be seen of subjects to smoke progressively fewer experimental cigarettes week by week, regardless of nicotine content, and to end up smoking fewer of their own cigarettes than during, the first week of the study.

The psychological measurements of strength show that most subjects could detect that the nicotine content of the three experimental cigarettes was different, thus causing the higher nicotine cigarettes to taste stronger (t tests, p <0.05 for 0 vs. 2%; p <0.01 for 0 vs. 3%; p <0.05 for 2% vs. 3%). However, the strength estimates were numerically very close, and group 3, which received the 3% nicotine cigarettes first, continued to rate all the experimental cigarettes stronger than their own brands.

The "quality" ratings show that no subjects liked the experimental cigarettes more than their own brands, and indeed, all of the subjects complained about the taste of the lettuce cigarettes throughout the experiment. This aversiveness measure was generally higher for the experimental cigarettes, whatever the nicotine content, than for the first week with the subjects' own brands, although it was highest for group 3 which had also noted a higher strength measure, is indicated above. The rating for the subjects' own brands in week 5 was higher for each of the groups than in week 1 showing a decrease in satisfaction.

Discussion

These results indicate that subjects do perceive differences in nicotine content of cigarettes but that the physiological effects of these quantitative differences do not necessarily correlate with perceived psychological effects. It should be noted that the problem of subjective strength and quality discriminations is especially difficult, particularly when it interacts with taste factors and subjects' craving for cigarettes. This is a situation well known to workers in psychophysics who find it necessary to use trained subjects for sensory discriminations. It may explain the fact that larger differences in strength and quality were not seen for the three experimental cigarettes, which, when compared to commercially available brands, represent cigarettes lower in nicotine thin any available (the non-nicotine variety), average in nicotine (1.26 mg/cigarette), and higher in nicotine (2.26 mg/cigarette) than any available.

It is interesting to note that few subjects reported maximum satisfaction levels when smoking, their own brands of cigarettes during week 1. After having, smoked the experimental cigarettes for 3 weeks, most subjects upon returning, to their own brands, showed a decreased rate of smoking. They also found their own cigarettes somewhat stronger than before and, on the whole, less satisfying. It may be that the aversive quality of the experimental cigarettes generalized to the smokers' own brands. Perhaps this procedure might offer a clue for curing smokers of their habit. On, the other hand, the component of habit in human smoking seems quite strong, especially when it is realized that after It least two years of smoking, the subjects found even their own brands, at best "moderately satisfactory" (1.0 on the quality scale). It should also be noted that, even though they disliked the experimental cigarettes, all of the subjects continued to smoke them it a high rate. This would indicate a fair degree of functional autonomy of the smoking habit from nicotine.

Acknowledgments. This research was supported by Grant TH-1 from the American Cancer Society.

The experimental lettuce cigarettes used in this study were provided by Mr. Putzant C. Torigian of Bravo Smokes, Cliffside Park, New Jersey, whose cooperation and encouragement helped make these experiments possible. Analysis and nicotine determination of the experimental cigarettes was performed by Fitelson Laboratories, New York.

References

Finnegan, J. K., Larson, P. S., Haag, H. B.: The role of nicotine in the cigarette habit. Science 102, 94-96 (1945).

Herxheimer, A., Griffiths, R. L., Hamilton, B., Wakefield, M.: Circulatory effects of nicotine aerosol inhalations and cigarette smoking in man. Lancet 1067 11, 754-755.

Johnston, L. M.: Tobacco smoking and nicotine. Lancet 1042, 742.

Lucchesi, B. R., Schuster, C. R., Emley, G. S.: The role of nicotine as a determinant of cigarette smoking frequency in man with observations of certain cardiovascular effects associated with the tobacco alkaloid. Clin. Phamacol. Ther. S, 789-796 (1967).

Dr. Murray E. Jarvik
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Yeshiva University
1300 Morris Park Avenue
Bronx, N. Y. 10461, U.S.A.

Back To Table Of Contents

 

If you Must Smoke
Lettuce Said Best
To Avoid Cancer

MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - If you'd rather live than take a chance on dying prematurely of cancer you may consider smoking cigarettes made of Iceberg lettuce in the future.

The lettuce cigarettes seem to be very safe, Dr. George E. Moore, a cancer expert, said here Wednesday.

Moore said tests at the Roswell Park Memorial institute in Buffalo, N.Y.--one of the world's leading cancer research institutes--with lettuce cigarettes had been very satisfactory, but had been limited to animals so far. Moore is the head of the institute.

Moore spoke at a news conference. He was in Minneapolis to address the annual meeting of the Minnesota Academy of General Practice.

Smoking is responsible for 45,000 or more premature cancer-caused deaths In the United States each year, he said. He said there are ways to cut the cancer danger of smoking, be sides the obvious one to stop smoking and besides the future possibility of switching to the lettuce cigarettes.

Even tobacco cigarettes, can be made safer. Moore said. He said the cancer danger in smoking is primarily in the tar. This had been established by experiments on animals, he said.

Moore said Roswell Park recently listed its research findings on the amount of tar that gets through various brands of commercial cigarettes. There is a big difference between brands, he said, adding that some filter cigarettes allow more tar to go through an some non-filter cigarettes.

Moore also talked about leukemia, calling it "the most lethal form of cancer" but added there now appears to be some hope it can be cured.

You are Visitor Number

Copyright © 2001 S. A. Cunningham All rights reserved.
               Information in this document is subject to change without notice.
               Other products and companies referred to herein are trademarks
               or registered trademarks of their respective companies or mark holders.