Health
Tobacco use may double risk of alcohol dependency
London, Feb 26
People who use snus, a moist
powder tobacco product, run twice the risk of developing alcohol
dependency as compared with non-users. This suggests that nicotine
dependency in any form could lead to alcohol addiction, says a new
study.
The researchers added that the more one uses snus, the
higher the risk. "This is the first time research has succeeded in
showing that middle-aged people, who use snus run an increased risk of
developing alcohol dependency," said Margareta Norberg, adjunct lecturer
at the Umea University in Sweden.
The current study included
21,000 people, who were aged 30, 40 or 50 between 1991-1997. None of the
participants then showed signs of alcohol dependency. A quarter of the
men, 25 percent, and slightly less than 4 percent of the women used snus
upon the first examination.
The study showed that after ten
years, alcohol dependency developed for just under eight percent of snus
users and three percent among those who did not use snus.
Men
showed slightly higher figures for alcohol dependency than women. In
total, 499 men and 257 women developed alcohol dependency.
Those
who, upon the first investigation, who were aged 50, had a lower risk
than those aged 30. That there is a connection association between
smoking and alcohol dependency has been known for a long time, says a
study that appeared in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence.