When nicotine acts, it causes adrenaline to be released into your body. Adrenalin works in the "fight or flight" system of the body, a.k.a. the sympathetic nervous system. If you've every run after a cab then you know what the "fight or flight" system does. Your heart beats faster; your blood vessels constrict. Nicotine is a vasoconstrictor, and that's why your cold fingers feel even colder when you smoke that necessary cigarette in mid-January. The blood supply to the skin is decreased, drawing heat away from the skin. Adrenaline also tells your body to drop lots of glucose in your blood, a life of hyperglycemia, and tells insulin to "Stop! Don't take that glucose out of the blood!". With plenty of glucose in the blood, the body thinks its not hungry, hence cigarettes as appetite suppressors. In addition to all of this excitement, in the long run, nicotine increases the amount of low-density lipoproteins, LDL, commonly known as "bad" lipoproteins, which increases the risk of heart attacks and strokes.
If that's all that nicotine did to our bodies then we could all just run around to get the physical feeling of adrenaline pumping through our bodies, but nicotine has a field day in the brain. The acetylcholine receptors mentioned previously are located in a pathway in the brain known as the "reward center". This is the same place that is stimulated when we eat, when we drink, when we have sex. Cocaine works on the same pathway. When nicotine stimulates the neurons in the reward center, the neurons release dopamine. Dopamine reinforces activities that are essential for survival, like eating, sleeping, and now smoking, not that smoking is essential for survival, but dopamine makes us feel that way. Cigarettes are positively reinforced by our brain! That's why quitting is so hard.
Release of acetylcholine also causes neurons in other parts of the brain to release glutamate, which is involved in developing memories. One theory says that new memories are created about cigarettes as you smoke them, thereby hardwiring the little suckers and the euphoric feeling they create into your brain.
Nicotine is actually not very harmful. What is harmful is the chemicals that come along with it, such as carbon monoxide, coal tars, and so forth. They cause cancer and other problems such as emphysema and COPD.
Nicotine is a Stimulant that affects the body by speeding up Metabolic Activities.
The main one is the brain, nicotine also affects the teeth, gum, blood pressure, and also the lungs. nicotine makes your gum thin, and the yellowing of teeth.
All Lungs, heart, liver and kidney
Your lungs
It is processed by the liver and excreted via the kidneys.
Nicotine itself is not especially bad for you, but the other chemicals that go along with smoking AND smokeless tobacco are deadly.
Nicotine!
nicotine
No. However the body has nicotinic receptors in nerve cells- places where nicotine binds to cause it's psychoactive effects. These receptors are probably also activated by substances created by the body which have a structure very similar to nicotine- it's not as though we'd evolve to all have a very special receptor created for the sole purpose of responding to a drug!
Nicotine is an extremely addictive drug. When smoking, nicotine enters the bloodstream and goes straight to the brain. The brain is the body system that nicotine effects
Does vitamin c help remove nicotine from the body..
In the bloodstream.
It is processed by the liver and excreted via the kidneys.
Nicotine can be detected in the body of a person who is dead after drinking it in a little amount. Nicotine is not usually drunk but is generally found in tobacco smoke.
Type your answer here... no
nicotine
not that much
The half-life of nicotine in the body is about three hours. If you don't replace it, it will be gone in less than two days, regardless of what you do (or don't do) about it.
What pill or drink can i take to get nicotine out of my body i have a test in 6 days
Nicotine and caffeine are called stimulants. They get the heart pumping and give you energy.
You don't have to remove it. Nicotine doesn't stay long in the body. Once you quit using it it leaves the body. That is why smokers crave another cigarette.