Can Blood Tests Detect Nicotine?

For medical, legal or insurance purposes, it is sometimes necessary to measure a person's nicotine levels. This can be done reliably through urinalysis or blood testing. Blood tests are not uniformly successful or accurate, but they can give a general picture of whether or not the person has recently used a tobacco product.

  1. Nicotine and Cotinine

    • When nicotine is absorbed into the body, it breaks down into cotinine. A blood test for nicotine will usually include a measurement of cotinine levels.

    Half-Life

    • Nicotine has a half-life of roughly two hours, meaning that half the nicotine in the body converts to cotinine every two hours. Cotinine's half-life is roughly twenty hours.

    Time Frame

    • Because nicotine is metabolized so quickly, a blood test will only detect trace amounts after 24 to 72 hours. Cotinine may take up to 10 days to drop to levels undetectable by blood test.

    False Negatives

    • Blood test results may fail to detect nicotine if the blood sample more than 24 hours after the person last smoked or chewed tobacco.

    False Positives

    • People with certain types of liver defect may show nicotine and cotinine in their blood weeks or months after quitting.

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