| Literature DB >> 29375395 |
Konstantinos E Farsalinos1,2,3, Gene Gillman4.
Abstract
Carbonyl emissions from tobacco cigarettes represent a substantial health risk contributing to smoking-related morbidity and mortality. As expected, this is an important research topic for tobacco harm reduction products, in an attempt to compare the relative risk of these products compared to tobacco cigarettes. In this study, a systematic review of the literature available on PubMed was performed analyzing the studies evaluating carbonyl emissions from e-cigarettes. A total of 32 studies were identified and presented. We identified a large diversity of methodologies, with substantial discrepancies in puffing patterns, aerosol collection and analytical methods as well as reported units of measurements. Such discrepancies make comparisons difficult, and in some cases the accuracy of the findings cannot be determined. Importantly, control for the generation of dry puffs was not performed in the vast majority of studies, particularly in studies using variable power devices, which could result in testing conditions and reported carbonyl levels that have no clinical relevance or context. Some studies have been replicated, verifying the presence of dry puff conditions. Whenever realistic use conditions were ensured, carbonyl emissions from e-cigarettes were substantially lower than tobacco cigarette smoke, while newer generation (bottom-coil, cotton wick) atomizers appeared to emit minimal levels of carbonyls with questionable clinical significance in terms of health risk. However, extremely high levels of carbonyl emissions were reported in some studies, and all these studies need to be replicated because of potentially important health implications.Entities:
Keywords: aerosol; carbonyls; e-cigarettes; emissions; smoking
Year: 2018 PMID: 29375395 PMCID: PMC5769337 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2017.01119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Prisma flow diagram showing the methodology for literature review and selection of studies.
Puffing regimes, carbonyl trapping materials, analytical methods, and units reported in studies (n = 32) measuring carbonyl emissions from e-cigarettes.
| 55/2/30 | 3 | Uchiyama et al., |
| 70/1.8/10 | 1 | Goniewicz et al., |
| 70/1.8/17 | 1 | Kosmider et al., |
| 55/3/30 | 2 | Hutzler et al., |
| 35/4/30 | 1 | Geiss et al., |
| 50/4/30 | 2 | Jensen et al., |
| 70/3/10 | 1 | Laugesen, |
| 60/4/30 | 2 | Farsalinos et al., |
| 40/4/10 | 1 | Herrington and Myers, |
| 43/2/15-60 | 1 | Blair et al., |
| 152.8/8/10 | 1 | Talih et al., |
| 55/4/30 | 3 | Flora et al., |
| 33.4/2/10 | 1 | Jo and Kim, |
| 50/3/20 | 1 | Geiss et al., |
| 80/4/30 | 1 | Havel et al., |
| 50/5/30 | 2 | Sleiman et al., |
| 100/4/10 | 1 | El-Hellani et al., |
| 40/4/30 | 1 | Khlystov and Samburova, |
| 91/4/30 | 1 | Ogunwale et al., |
| 70/2/10 | 1 | Sala et al., |
| 45-80/2/60 | 1 | Klager et al., |
| 66.7/4/10 | 1 | Talih et al., |
| DNPH-coated silica cartridges/silica sorbent tubes | 13 | Goniewicz et al., |
| Hydroquinone-DNPH coupled silica cartridges | 2 | Uchiyama et al., |
| Impingers with DNPH | 10 | Hutzler et al., |
| Tedlar bags and DNPH-coated silica cartridges | 1 | Geiss et al., |
| NMR spectroscopy tube | 1 | Jensen et al., |
| Thermal desorption tubes | 1 | Herrington and Myers, |
| Teflon bag and fast flow tube | 1 | Blair et al., |
| Sorbent cartridge with Carboxen-572 particles | 1 | Uchiyama et al., |
| Tedlar bag and silicon microreactors with AMAH | 1 | Ogunwale et al., |
| Divinylbenzene/carboxen/polydimethylsiloxane fiber | 1 | Sala et al., |
| HPLC | 24 | Uchiyama et al., |
| UPLC | 3 | Tayyarah and Long, |
| NMR spectroscopy | 1 | Jensen et al., |
| TD-GC-MS | 1 | Herrington and Myers, |
| PTRMS | 1 | Blair et al., |
| GC-MS, NMR | 1 | Ogunwale et al., |
| SPME-GC-MS | 1 | Sala et al., |
| Amount per aerosol volume (m3 or L or mL) | 5 | Uchiyama et al., |
| Amount per puff number | 20 | Goniewicz et al., |
| Amount per liquid consumption | 8 | Gillman et al., |
| Ppm | 1 | Herrington and Myers, |
One study (Wang et al., .
Some studies reported more than one unit for carbonyl emissions. One study (Kosmider et al., .
Puff volume, puff duration, and interpuff interval used in studies (n = 32) measuring carbonyl emissions from e-cigarettes.
| 33.4 mL | 1 | Jo and Kim, |
| 35 mL | 1 | Geiss et al., |
| 40 mL | 2 | Herrington and Myers, |
| 43 mL | 1 | Blair et al., |
| 50 mL | 4 | Jensen et al., |
| 55 mL | 8 | Uchiyama et al., |
| 60 mL | 2 | Farsalinos et al., |
| 66.7 mL | 1 | Talih et al., |
| 70 mL | 4 | Goniewicz et al., |
| 80 mL | 1 | Havel et al., |
| 91 mL | 1 | Ogunwale et al., |
| 100 mL | 1 | El-Hellani et al., |
| 152.8 mL | 1 | Talih et al., |
| Variable | 1 | Klager et al., |
| 1.8 s | 2 | Goniewicz et al., |
| 2 s | 6 | Uchiyama et al., |
| 3 s | 4 | Hutzler et al., |
| 4 s | 14 | Havel et al., |
| 5 s | 2 | Sleiman et al., |
| 8 s | 1 | Talih et al., |
| 10 s | 7 | Goniewicz et al., |
| 17 s | 1 | Kosmider et al., |
| 20 s | 1 | Geiss et al., |
| 30 s | 17 | Uchiyama et al., |
| 60 s | 2 | Blair et al., |
One study (Wang et al., .