Literature DB >> 17606835

Symptoms of tobacco dependence after brief intermittent use: the Development and Assessment of Nicotine Dependence in Youth-2 study.

Joseph R DiFranza1, Judith A Savageau, Kenneth Fletcher, Jennifer O'Loughlin, Lori Pbert, Judith K Ockene, Ann D McNeill, Jennifer Hazelton, Karen Friedman, Gretchen Dussault, Connie Wood, Robert J Wellman.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To extend the findings of the first Development and Assessment of Nicotine Dependence in Youth study by using diagnostic criteria for tobacco dependence and a biochemical measure of nicotine intake. The first study found that symptoms of dependence commonly appeared soon after the onset of intermittent smoking.
DESIGN: A 4-year prospective study.
SETTING: Public schools in 6 Massachusetts communities. PARTICIPANTS: A cohort of 1246 sixth-grade students.
INTERVENTIONS: Eleven interviews. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Loss of autonomy over tobacco as measured by the Hooked on Nicotine Checklist, and tobacco dependence as defined in International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10).
RESULTS: Among the 217 inhalers, 127 lost autonomy over their tobacco use, 10% having done so within 2 days and 25% having done so within 30 days of first inhaling from a cigarette; half had lost autonomy by the time they were smoking 7 cigarettes per month. Among the 83 inhalers who developed ICD-10-defined dependence, half had done so by the time they were smoking 46 cigarettes per month. At the interview following the onset of ICD-10-defined dependence, the median salivary cotinine concentration of current smokers was 5.35 ng/mL, a level that falls well below the cutoff used to distinguish active from passive smokers.
CONCLUSIONS: The most susceptible youths lose autonomy over tobacco within a day or 2 of first inhaling from a cigarette. The appearance of tobacco withdrawal symptoms and failed attempts at cessation can precede daily smoking; ICD-10-defined dependence can precede daily smoking and typically appears before consumption reaches 2 cigarettes per day.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17606835     DOI: 10.1001/archpedi.161.7.704

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med        ISSN: 1072-4710


  134 in total

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Review 9.  The behavioral ecology of secondhand smoke exposure: A pathway to complete tobacco control.

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10.  Individual- and community-level correlates of cigarette-smoking trajectories from age 13 to 32 in a U.S. population-based sample.

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