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Stephan,
The article I read in Discover Magazine (Jan, 1997) states that nicotine is
not the ingredient that stimulates the cells producing dopamine.

Here's the article again:

"Over the past few years, several studies have found that people who smoke
have about half the risk that nonsmokers have of developing Parkinson's
Disease. Last February researchers reported a possible reason for this
strange link: an enzyme called monoamine oxidase B (mao B). Mao B is one of
the enzymes involved in breaking down the neurotransmitter dopamine, which
the brain uses when it creates and controls movement. Because people with
Parkinson's have unusually low levels of dopamine, they suffer from
uncontrollable tremors, rigid muscles, and difficulty walking and talking.
Chemist Joanne Fowler and her colleagues at Brookhaven National Laboratory
in Upton, New York, PET-scanned the brains of eight smokers, eight
nonsmokers, and four former smokers. They found that mao B levels in the
smokers' brains were 40 percent lower than in the other two groups. If you
have less mao B, the researchers speculate, then you'll have more available
dopamine and be less prone to Parkinson's -indeed, some of the best drugs
used against the disease work by inhibiting mao B.
What's the ingredient in cigarette smoke that does the job? The researchers
only know that it's not nicotine."  (Lori Oliwenstein)

Germaine