| Literature DB >> 31819131 |
Cristina Sempio1, Emily Lindley2, Jost Klawitter1, Uwe Christians1, Russell P Bowler3, John L Adgate3,4, William Allshouse3,4, Lauren Awdziejczyk1, Sarah Fischer5, Jacquelyn Bainbridge5, Mike Vandyke6, Rahwa Netsanet2, Tessa Crume7, Gregory L Kinney8.
Abstract
The number of cannabis users increased up to 188 million users worldwide in 2017. Smoking and vaping are the most common consumption routes with formation of side-stream smoke/vapor and secondhand exposure to cannabinoids has been described in the literature. External contamination of hair by cannabis smoke has been studied but there are no studies on third-hand cannabis exposure due to deposition of smoke or vapor on surfaces. We tested whether cannabinoids could be detected on surfaces and objects in a room where cannabis is vaporized. Surface samples were collected using isopropanol imbued non-woven wipes from hard surfaces and objects. Each surface was swabbed three times with standardized swabbing protocol including three different patterns. Samples were analyzed using LC-ESI-MS/MS in combination with online extraction. THC was detected on 6 samples out of the 15 collected in the study room at quantifiable levels ranging 348-4882 ng/m2. Negative control samples collected from areas outside the study room were all negative. We demonstrated that surfaces exposed to side-stream cannabis vapor are positive for THC at quantifiable levels. This study represents a first step in understanding how side-stream cannabis vapor deposits in the environment and potentially results in a tertiary exposure for users and non-users.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31819131 PMCID: PMC6901575 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-55151-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
LC-MS/MS parameters for THC and internal standard on surfaces. Transition in bold was used for THC quantification.
| Compound | Q1 (amu) | Q3 (amu) | DP (V) | EP (eV) | CE (V) | CXP (V) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| THC | 315.2 | 193.1 | 60 | 10 | 30 | 11 |
| THC | 315.2 | 259.3 | 60 | 10 | 28 | 11 |
| THC-d3 | 318.4 | 196.3 | 60 | 10 | 30 | 11 |
DP: declustering potential, EP: exit potential, CE: collision energy, CXP: collision cell exit potential; amu: atomic mass unit; THC: δ9-tetrahydrocannabidiol.
Figure 1(A) representative calibration curve. The assay was linear from 295 ng/m2 to 2959 ng/m2. (B) shows a representative ion chromatogram of a negative sample and (C) a representative ion chromatogram of a positive sample (2024 ng/m2). Right chromatogram THC, blue dotted area represents the quantifier transition and the red dotted line represents the qualifier ion transition. The left ion chromatogram shows the internal standard THC-d3.
THC amounts detected on different surfaces exposed to cannabis vapors.
| Sample Description | Surface Area (m2) | THC (ng/m2) |
|---|---|---|
| Floor | 0.06 | BLQ |
| Chair Seat | 0.31 | 704 |
| Fixed Table | 0.06 | BLQ |
| Movable Table | 0.06 | BLQ |
| Grooved Pegboard Task assessment | unknown | BLQ |
| Door Knob | 0.012 | BLQ |
| Volcano | 0.034 | 349 |
| Window Bar | unknown | BLQ |
| Fixed Table | 0.06 | 2339 |
| Movable Table Sample 1 | 0.06 | 2024 |
| Movable Table Sample 2* | 0.06 | 843 |
| Window Sill x 1 Swabs | 0.036 | BLQ |
| Window Sill x 2 Swabs | 0.036 | BLQ |
| Window Sill x 3 Swabs | 0.036 | 4882** |
| Grooved Pegboard Task assessment | unknown | 997 |
| Clock Face | 0.06 | BLQ |
| Home Location 1 | 0.06 | BLQ |
| Home Location 2 | 0.06 | BLQ |
| Home Location 3 | 0.06 | BLQ |
Hard surfaces present in the study room were sampled using isopropanol imbued non-woven wipes. One area was sampled from each surface tested. Unless otherwise stated, each surface was swabbed three times following a standardized protocol including three different swabbing patterns. Negative samples were collected following the same protocol from the clock outside the study room and from different locations in the house of a non-user.
BLQ: below limit of quantification; *sample collected from the same area after 10 minutes; **estimated value above upper limit of quantification.