Previous
research conducted on rats have provided results
illustrating the effects of nicotine on bone growth. Dr.
Paulson and a team of scientists from Ohio State University
observed reductions in ossification in the femur, forelimb,
nasal bone, ribs, and the skull and face (Paulson et al.
1994). Most likely the retardation of bone development is a
result of nicotine inhibiting the absorption of calcium in
the embryo. Similar research on humans has also been
conducted to examine the effects of nicotine on birth weight
and body length. Dr. Bardy and his colleagues from the
National Public Health Institute
inFinland recorded the birth
weight and crown-heel length in newborns that had been
exposed to nicotine. They found that the exposed newborns
were on average 188 g lighter and 10 mm shorter than the
nonexposed newborns (Bardy 1993). This result suggests that
nicotine causes a retardation in embryonic
development.
Additional
research has also been done concerning the effects of
nicotine on heart rate. Dr. Dienes and a team of scientists
examined the effects of nicotine on the cardiovascular
system in pregnant women. What they found was that nicotine
was associated with
anincrease in maternal and
fetal heart rate (Dienes 1999). Therefore, nicotine is known
not only to affect growth but also the cardiovascular
system.
Although
the effects of nicotine have been extensively studied in
organisms such as humans and rats, there has been little
research done using chick embryos. This is difficult to
understand considering that the chick is one of the model
organisms used in most experiments involving development.
Most of the research conducted thus far concerning nicotine
and chicks has been by Dr. Gilani from Germany. In one
experiment he investigated the effects of nicotine on 48
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