Difference between revisions of "Cotinine"
Paul Herring (talk | contribs) |
Paul Herring (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
[[Cotinine]] is also sold as a drug in its own right as an antidepressant under the brand name [[Cotinine|Scotine]]<ref>[http://www.mondofacto.com/facts/dictionary?cotinine Cotinine] - Mondofacto</ref>. | [[Cotinine]] is also sold as a drug in its own right as an antidepressant under the brand name [[Cotinine|Scotine]]<ref>[http://www.mondofacto.com/facts/dictionary?cotinine Cotinine] - Mondofacto</ref>. | ||
− | It is also present in other plants such as those in the family Solanaceae, including tomatoes and potatoes, and in some black teas<ref name="pubmed">[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1765327 Dietary nicotine: a source of urinary cotinine] - PubMed</ref> | + | It is also present in other plants such as those in the family Solanaceae, including tomatoes and potatoes, and in some black teas<ref name="pubmed">[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1765327 Dietary nicotine: a source of urinary cotinine] - PubMed</ref>, aubergines (eggplants)<ref>[http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/15/nicotine-in-vegetables_n_1597087.html Nicotine In Vegetables: 20 Pounds Of Eggplant Equivalent To 1 Cigarette] - Huffington Post</ref> and cauliflower<ref>[https://www.vidarholen.net/contents/junk/nicotine.html The nicotine contents of vegetables] - Vidar's Index</ref>. |
{{quote|Because of the potential for exposure to nicotine by way of these routes [i.e. by eating or drinking], the use of urinary cotinine as a biomarker of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke may be compromised.<ref name="pubmed" />}} | {{quote|Because of the potential for exposure to nicotine by way of these routes [i.e. by eating or drinking], the use of urinary cotinine as a biomarker of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke may be compromised.<ref name="pubmed" />}} |
Latest revision as of 15:40, 12 February 2019
Cotinine is an alkaloid found in tobacco and is also a metabolite of nicotine[1]. Its presence in saliva, blood or urine is (ab)used as a presumption of nicotine consumption, whether by smoking tobacco products or by using smoking cessation products that contain nicotine (gum, patches, e-cigs,) and such testing is used to screen employees in companies that ban employees from smoking at all.
It can also be present in those who have had exposure to second hand smoke in levels that cannot be differentiated from that of a light smoker.
Cotinine is also sold as a drug in its own right as an antidepressant under the brand name Scotine[2].
It is also present in other plants such as those in the family Solanaceae, including tomatoes and potatoes, and in some black teas[3], aubergines (eggplants)[4] and cauliflower[5].
Because of the potential for exposure to nicotine by way of these routes [i.e. by eating or drinking], the use of urinary cotinine as a biomarker of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke may be compromised.[3]
In Feb 2016, it was reported that in Belgium, people who failed a cotinine urine test in the previous six months would not be reimbursed the costs of a drug to help with pulmonary fibrosis, due the presumption that they'd been smoking. [6]
References
- ↑ Cotinine - Wikipedia
- ↑ Cotinine - Mondofacto
- ↑ a b Dietary nicotine: a source of urinary cotinine - PubMed
- ↑ Nicotine In Vegetables: 20 Pounds Of Eggplant Equivalent To 1 Cigarette - Huffington Post
- ↑ The nicotine contents of vegetables - Vidar's Index
- ↑ Belgium: A drug will not be refunded to nicotine users - PGVP