Objectives: This study examined the degree to which breast-feeding and cigarette smoking by mothers and smoking by other household members contribute to the exposure of infants to the products of tobacco smoke.
Methods: The subjects were 330 mother-infant pairs derived from a cohort of 1000 pairs enrolled in a longitudinal study of the pulmonary effects of prenatal and postnatal smoking. The main outcome measure was corrected urinary cotinine levels.
Background: Most studies of the reproductive consequences of cigarette smoking base exposure on self-reported smoking habits. This study examines the relationship of birth outcomes to the timing and intensity of maternal active and passive smoking estimated both from self-reports and from cotinine concentration in maternal urine during early, middle, and late gestation.
Method: This cohort study included 740 white and Hispanic women who obtained antenatal care at the East Boston Neighborhood Health Center between 1986 and 1992.
The process and outcome of a smoking cessation program using behavior therapy alone (BT) or behavior therapy plus the nicotine patch (BTP) was studied in 64 participants. Participants quit smoking on a target date after a period of ad libitum smoking, cognitive-behavior therapy preparing them for cessation, and behavioral rehearsal for high-risk situations, including stress management, and coping with negative affect. Abstinence was significantly higher for the BTP group versus the BT group from the end of behavioral treatment (79% vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne hundred one smokers were divided into high and low trait anxiety groups on the basis of a normalized score on the Profile of Mood States Anxiety/Tension Scale and were randomly assigned to receive buspirone or placebo in a double-blind fashion. After a 1-week baseline, smokers were exposed to an 8-week drug and behavioral intervention involving buspirone or placebo (up to 60 mg/day) with concurrent group cognitive behavioral intervention. All smokers were to quit smoking on the target date, set at 4 weeks after the program began.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study compared the efficacy of 2 traditional methods of smoking cessation, gradual reduction and "cold turkey," with a new approach involving variation in the intercigarette interval. One hundred twenty-eight participants quit smoking on a target date, after a 3-week period of (a) scheduled reduced smoking (progressive increase in the intercigarette interval), (b) nonscheduled reduced smoking (gradual reduction, no specific change in the intercigarette interval), (c) scheduled nonreduced smoking (fixed intercigarette interval, no reductions in frequency), or (c) nonscheduled nonreduced smoking (no change in intercigarette interval or smoking frequency). Participants also received cognitive-behavioral relapse prevention training.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the current study, 34 smokers were treated in a smoking cessation program that involved either a scheduled smoking procedure, or a minimal contact self-help treatment control. The interval smoking program consisted of baseline, cessation, and relapse prevention phases. During baseline, subjects self-monitored smoking and the total hours spent awake.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the effect of prenatal maternal cigarette smoking on the pulmonary function (PF) of 80 healthy infants tested shortly after birth (mean, 4.2 +/- 1.9 wk).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe timing of fetal lung maturation is regulated, at least in part, by the fetal endocrine milieu, which in turn may be influenced by environmental factors. Infants of smoking mothers are at decreased risk of neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), a disease of lung immaturity. Therefore, we measured fetal lung maturity and cigarette smoke exposure to determine whether the lungs of smoke-exposed fetuses mature more quickly and whether changes in maturation are associated with alterations in amniotic fluid (AF) cortisol levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCotinine, one of the major metabolites of nicotine, is formed by two sequential enzyme reactions: [formula: see text] Chemical and immunological methods of analysis are available to quantify these two compounds (I and III). Study of the intermediate (III) is hampered because of its complex chemistry and lack of simple methods for its assay. Generally, (II) is trapped by addition of cyanide and analyzed as the 5'-cyanonicotine adduct.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe correlation between cotinine concentrations in a single specimen of urine and in serum collected on the same occasion from 279 male smokers was 0.83. This was significantly increased, to 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFollowing a period of overnight deprivation, 58 smokers participated in a 90-min laboratory assessment in which they viewed a non-stressful movie and smoked two 0.5-mg nicotine-containing cigarettes. The first cigarette was given to all subjects following 25 min of adaptation and baseline.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor antibody production, the O-phosphorylated derivative of tyrosine, threonine, or serine was covalently linked to succinylated bovine albumin via the carbodiimide reaction. Each conjugate was then complexed with methylated bovine albumin for immunization of rabbits. To determine binding, the corresponding O-phosphorylated [3H]amino acids were chemically synthesized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to assess nicotine regulation among "heavy" and "light" smokers. Previous studies supporting the nicotine regulation model of smoking behavior have suggested that smokers compensate for a reduction in the amount of nicotine available in their cigarette by altering smoking frequency, puff volume, or other aspects of smoking topography. However, little is known about a smoker's decision to smoke a specific cigarette, and the concurrent changes in their blood nicotine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSerum and salivary cotinine levels were measured in 327 smoking and nonsmoking participants in a study of the health effects of marijuana with and without tobacco. These individuals had no reason to misrepresent their current tobacco-smoking status. The sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values positive and negative of the cotinine levels in distinguishing self-reported current tobacco smokers from nonsmokers was high (88-100%) and essentially the same for both fluids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacol Biochem Behav
August 1988
Serum and salivary cotinine levels were determined in tobacco smokers (n = 125) who smoked only tobacco (n = 47) or who smoked both marijuana and tobacco (n = 78) as part of a field study of the pulmonary effects of heavy, habitual use of marijuana alone or with tobacco. After adjustment for current daily amount of tobacco use and time since the last tobacco cigarette was smoked, the smokers of both marijuana and tobacco were found to have lower levels of cotinine than those who smoked only tobacco, in serum [258 +/- 113 ng/ml (S.D.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of cigarette smoking and its active component, nicotine, on the gastric emptying of solid food was assessed in a randomized double-blind crossover design. Ten regular smokers were studied after a 6 h fast and least 18 h after their last cigarette. Subjects smoked a total of three high (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn okadaic acid immunogen, prepared by conjugation of okadaic acid to bovine albumin with carbodiimide, was used to immunize two rabbits. The rabbits responded by producing antibodies that neutralized okadaic acid's stimulation of arachidonic acid metabolism and this neutralization increased during the course of immunization. The immune sera bound 3H-okadaic acid and this binding also increased with repeated immunization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPalytoxin, labelled with 125I-Bolton-Hunter reagent on its terminal amino group, bound specifically to rabbit anti-palytoxin. The extent of binding increased progressively with repeated immunizations. After absorption of the rabbit IgGs with a goat anti-rabbit IgG, binding was reduced greater than 95%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPalytoxin stimulated arachidonic acid metabolism (in bovine aorta endothelial and smooth muscle cells, rat keratinocytes, porcine aorta endothelial cells and rat liver cells), hemolyzed rat erythrocytes and was lethal to mice when administered intraperitoneally. Serum from rabbits immunized with a conjugate in which palytoxin was covalently bound to bovine albumin through its free amino group neutralized these biologic activities of palytoxin. Ninety-nine per cent of the neutralizing activity of the immunized rabbit serum was removed after precipitation of the rabbit IgG with a goat anti-rabbit IgG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStereospecific monoclonal antibodies (McAb) have been prepared against the tobacco alkaloid (S)-(-)-nicotine and its major metabolite (S)-(-)-cotinine. Nine anti-nicotine and 4 anti-cotinine hybridomas, selected by a screening procedure that utilized immunoprecipitation of the 3H-labeled natural isomers of nicotine or continine, were grown in the ascites fluid of pristane-primed syngeneic BALB/c mice. Antibodies in concentrations up to 7.
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