Vermont Center on Behavior and Health, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2018 Sep 4;20(10):1243-1249. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntx148.
Most pregnant smokers report abruptly reducing their cigarettes per day (CPD) by ~50% after learning of pregnancy and making further smaller reductions over the remainder of their pregnancy. Laboratory and naturalistic studies with non-pregnant smokers have found that these types of reductions often lead to changes in smoking topography (i.e., changes in smoking intensity to maintain a desired blood-nicotine level). If pregnant women smoke more intensely, they may expose themselves and their offspring to similar levels of toxicants despite reporting reductions in CPD.
Pregnant and non-pregnant female smokers (n = 20 and 89, respectively) participated. At the experimental session, after biochemical confirmation of acute abstinence, participants smoked one usual brand cigarette ad lib through a Borgwaldt CReSS Desktop Smoking Topography device. Carbon monoxide (CO) and measures of nicotine withdrawal, craving, and reinforcement derived from smoking were also collected.
The two groups did not differ on demographic or smoking characteristics at screening, except nicotine metabolism rate, which as expected, was faster in pregnant smokers. Analyses suggest that none of the smoking topography parameters differed between pregnant and non-pregnant smokers, although pregnant smokers had a significantly smaller CO boost. Both groups reported similar levels of relief of withdrawal and craving after smoking, but other subjective effects suggest that pregnant smokers find smoking less reinforcing than non-pregnant smokers.
Pregnant smokers do not smoke cigarettes differently than non-pregnant women, but appear to find smoking comparatively less pleasurable.
This is the first study to assess smoking topography in pregnant women. Pregnant women appear to be at increased risk for smoking cigarettes with more intensity because of (1) their tendency to make significant abrupt reductions in the number of cigarettes they smoke each day after learning of pregnancy and (2) an increase in nicotine metabolism induced by pregnancy. Despite these changes, the present results suggest that pregnant women do not smoke cigarettes more intensely or in a way that causes more toxicant exposure, perhaps due to a reportedly less pleasurable smoking experience.
大多数孕妇在得知怀孕后会突然将每天的香烟摄入量(CPD)减少约 50%,并在整个孕期内进一步少量减少。对非孕妇吸烟者进行的实验室和自然主义研究发现,这些类型的减少通常会导致吸烟地形学的变化(即,为了维持所需的血液尼古丁水平而改变吸烟强度)。如果孕妇吸烟更剧烈,尽管报告了 CPD 的减少,她们可能会使自己和她们的后代暴露于类似水平的有毒物质中。
研究纳入了 20 名孕妇和 89 名非孕妇吸烟者。在实验过程中,在生物化学确认急性戒断后,参与者通过 Borgwaldt CReSS 桌面吸烟地形学设备自由吸食一支惯用品牌香烟。还收集了一氧化碳(CO)和源自吸烟的尼古丁戒断、渴望和强化的测量值。
两组在筛选时的人口统计学和吸烟特征上没有差异,除了尼古丁代谢率,孕妇吸烟者的代谢率预期更快。分析表明,孕妇吸烟者和非孕妇吸烟者的吸烟地形学参数没有差异,尽管孕妇吸烟者的 CO 提升幅度较小。两组在吸烟后都报告了类似程度的戒断和渴望缓解,但其他主观效应表明,孕妇吸烟者认为吸烟的强化作用不如非孕妇吸烟者。
孕妇吸烟者的吸烟方式与非孕妇女性不同,但似乎觉得吸烟相对不那么愉快。
这是第一项评估孕妇吸烟地形学的研究。孕妇可能面临更高的风险,因为她们(1)在得知怀孕后倾向于大幅减少每天吸烟的数量,(2)怀孕期间尼古丁代谢增加。尽管有这些变化,但目前的结果表明,孕妇吸烟的强度或导致更多有毒物质暴露的方式并没有增加,这可能是因为据报道吸烟体验不太愉快。