The Star Malaysia

Possible positive effects of nicotine on the brain

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CAN nicotine, that addictive chemical found in tobacco and e-cigarettes, help your brain?

Researcher­s at Texas A&M College of Medicine in the United States found that, when given independen­tly from tobacco, the maligned chemical helps protect the ageing brain and may even hold off Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease.

Apparently, nicotine’s protective abilities may have something to do with its power to suppress appetite, according to Dr Ursula WinzerSerh­an, an associate professor at Texas A&M.

The study was published in the Open Access Journal of Toxicology.

This informatio­n coincides with previous research that has shown nicotine’s possible cognitive benefits by binding and activating certain receptors in the brain. These receptors, in turn, have been found to reduce neurodegen­eration.

For their study, the researcher­s added nicotine to lab mice’s drinking water. The mice were divided into four groups: those who received no nicotine and those who received low, medium and high concentrat­ions of nicotine.

The low- and medium-dosed mice showed no changes in food intake, body weight or number of receptors in the brain where nicotine acts. There was also no trace of nicotine in their blood.

However, the high-dosed group ate less, gained less weight and had more receptors, leading the researcher­s to conclude that the drug gets into the brain and impacts behaviour at higher doses.

What’s more, the high-dosed animals didn’t have the suspected behavioura­l side effects, such as anxiety.

“The last thing you would want in a drug that is given chronicall­y would be a negative change in behaviour,” Dr Winzer-Serhan said in a statement. “Luckily, we didn’t find any evidence of anxiety: Only two measures showed any effect even with high levels of nicotine, and if anything, nicotine made animal models less anxious.”

A lot more research needs to be done, primarily testing nicotine’s possible anti-ageing qualities on actual aged animals. And researcher­s say larger clinical trials need to be conducted as well.

“I want to make it very clear that we’re not encouragin­g people to smoke,” Dr Winzer-Serhan said.

“Even if these weren’t very preliminar­y results, smoking results in so many health problems that any possible benefit of the nicotine would be more than cancelled out.”

 ?? — TNS ?? Researcher­s at Texas A&M found that, when given independen­tly from tobacco, nicotine helps protect the ageing brain and may even hold off Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease.
— TNS Researcher­s at Texas A&M found that, when given independen­tly from tobacco, nicotine helps protect the ageing brain and may even hold off Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease.

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