Cheskin Lawrence J, Hess Judith M, Henningfield Jack, Gorelick David A
Department of Health and Human Services, Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2005 May;179(2):430-6. doi: 10.1007/s00213-004-2037-x. Epub 2004 Nov 25.
Cigarette smokers weigh less than nonsmokers, and smokers often gain weight when they quit. This is a major barrier to smoking cessation, especially among women. However, strict dieting is not recommended during smoking cessation out of concern that it might promote relapse. This concern derives, in part, from the observation that calorie restriction increases self-administration of drugs of abuse in animals. This relationship has never been experimentally demonstrated in humans.
To evaluate whether calorie restriction increases cigarette smoking in humans.
Seventeen (nine males, eight females) healthy, normal-weight smokers not attempting to quit were cycled in partially counterbalanced order, double-blind, through four diets-normal calorie (2,000-2,800 kcal/day), low calorie (700 kcal/day deficit), low-carbohydrate (CHO)/normal-calorie, and low-CHO/low-calorie-for 6 days per diet in an inpatient research ward. Smoking was assessed by cigarette counts, breath carbon monoxide (CO) levels, and cigarette craving.
Compared with the normal-calorie diet, while on the low-calorie diet, subjects smoked 8% more cigarettes (P<0.02) and had 11% higher breath CO levels (P<0.01). The low-CHO/normal-calorie diet showed no significant effect on either variable, but there was a 15% increase in breath CO levels (P<0.05) on the low-CHO/low-calorie diet. There were no changes in self-reported cigarette craving or mood.
Consistent with animal studies, moderate calorie restriction was associated with a small but statistically significant increase in cigarette smoking, with no independent effect of CHO deprivation. These findings suggest that dieting may increase smoking behavior and could impede smoking-cessation attempts.
吸烟者的体重低于不吸烟者,而且吸烟者戒烟后往往会体重增加。这是戒烟的一个主要障碍,在女性中尤为如此。然而,出于担心严格节食可能会促使复吸,因此不建议在戒烟期间严格节食。这种担忧部分源于这样的观察结果:热量限制会增加动物对成瘾药物的自我给药量。这种关系从未在人体中得到实验证实。
评估热量限制是否会增加人类的吸烟量。
17名(9名男性,8名女性)健康、体重正常且未打算戒烟的吸烟者,按照部分平衡的顺序,以双盲方式在住院研究病房中依次接受四种饮食方案——正常热量(2000 - 2800千卡/天)、低热量(每天减少700千卡)、低碳水化合物(CHO)/正常热量以及低碳水化合物/低热量,每种饮食方案持续6天。通过香烟计数、呼气一氧化碳(CO)水平和对香烟的渴望程度来评估吸烟情况。
与正常热量饮食相比,在低热量饮食期间,受试者吸烟量增加了8%(P<0.02),呼气CO水平升高了11%(P<0.01)。低碳水化合物/正常热量饮食对这两个变量均无显著影响,但在低碳水化合物/低热量饮食期间,呼气CO水平升高了15%(P<0.05)。自我报告的对香烟的渴望程度或情绪没有变化。
与动物研究一致,适度的热量限制与吸烟量的小幅但具有统计学意义的增加有关,碳水化合物缺乏没有独立影响。这些发现表明节食可能会增加吸烟行为,并可能阻碍戒烟尝试。