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Index/Topics/Nicotine Gum and Insulin Resistance

Nicotine Gum and Insulin Resistance

The link between long-term nicotine gum use and insulin resistance, based on a 1996 clinical comparison and animal experiments.

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3 results
Jan 16, 2026
Most Viewed

How long‑term is 'long‑term' in studies linking nicotine gum to insulin resistance, and what were the doses?

The oft‑quoted link between “long‑term” nicotine gum use and insulin resistance rests primarily on a 1996 clinical comparison that described users as long‑term but—within the reporting provided—did no...

Jan 17, 2026
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How do typical nicotine gum dosing regimens (2 mg vs 4 mg per piece) translate into mg/kg/day for adults compared with doses used in rodent studies?

Two commercially available nicotine gums deliver either 2 mg or 4 mg of nicotine per piece, and trials and guidelines describe usage patterns ranging from “as needed” every 1–2 hours to regimented hou...

Jan 17, 2026

What was the exact duration and daily nicotine intake reported for gum users in the 1996 Eliasson et al. Circulation paper?

The 1996 Circulation paper by Eliasson et al. compared 20 long‑term users of nicotine gum with 20 matched nonusers and reported that long‑term gum use was associated with hyperinsulinemia and insulin ...

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