Titration of nicotine intake with full-length and half-length cigarettes.
Titration, the self-regulation of nicotine intake, was studied in 12 smokers by gas chromatograph assays of urinary nicotine levels. Results demonstrated that excretion of urinary nicotine in the proximal condition (half cigarette close to the filter) did not differ significantly from the whole cigarette condition; however, less nicotine was excreted in the distal condition (half cigarette farther from the filter) because of a rod filtration effect. Subjects extracted proportionately more nicotine from the half than from the whole cigarettes; titration was approximately the same in both half-cigarette conditions. On scales of strength and satisfaction, full-length cigarettes were given the highest rating, followed by proximal and then distal cigarettes.[1]References
- Titration of nicotine intake with full-length and half-length cigarettes. Gritz, E.R., Baer-Weiss, V., Jarvik, M.E. Clin. Pharmacol. Ther. (1976) [Pubmed]
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