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Vol. 296, Issue 2, 486-494, February 2001
Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (B.E.G., R.R.G.),
and Neuroscience (R.R.G.), Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,
Baltimore, Maryland
The subjective and physiological effects of intravenously
administered caffeine and nicotine were compared in nine subjects with
histories of using caffeine, tobacco, and cocaine. Subjects abstained
from tobacco cigarette smoking for at least 8 h before each
session. Dietary caffeine was eliminated throughout the study; however,
to maintain consistency with the nicotine intake, subjects were
administered caffeine (150 mg/70 kg b.i.d.) in capsules, with the last
dose administered 15 to 18 h before each session. Under
double-blind conditions, subjects received placebo, caffeine (100, 200, and 400 mg/70 kg), and nicotine (0.75, 1.5, and 3.0 mg/70 kg) in mixed
order. Physiological and subjective data were collected before and
repeatedly after drug or placebo administration. Compared with the
highest dose of caffeine, the highest dose of nicotine produced greater
subjective ratings on a number of scales. At doses that produced
comparable ratings of drug effect (1.5 mg/70 kg of nicotine and 400 mg/70 kg of caffeine), both drugs produced similar increases in ratings
of good effect, liking, high, stimulated, and bad effect. Nicotine
showed a somewhat faster time to peak subjective effects than caffeine
(2 versus 4 min). Subjective ratings that differentiated caffeine and
nicotine were ratings of rush, blurry vision, and stimulant
identification (elevated by nicotine) and ratings of unusual smell
and/or taste (elevated by caffeine). Both caffeine and nicotine
decreased skin temperature and increased diastolic blood pressure;
however, caffeine decreased whereas nicotine increased heart rate. The
study documents both striking similarities and some notable differences
between caffeine and nicotine, which are among the most widely used
mood-altering drugs.
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