Literature DB >> 7501665

Smokers' behaviour and exposure according to cigarette yield and smoking experience.

J Hee1, F Callais, I Momas, A M Laurent, S Min, P Molinier, M Chastagnier, J R Claude, B Festy.   

Abstract

The influence of cigarette yield and length of smoking experience on smoking behaviour and biomarker levels was sought in 108 smokers who have never changed cigarette class. Smoking parameters carboxyhaemoglobin percentage (COHb), urinary nicotine, and its metabolites, mutagens, and thioethers were measured. Cigarette yield does not affect daily consumption or smoke volume puffed per cigarette. But the inhalation depth increases with decreasing cigarette yield and with length of smoking habit. The COHb level after the first cigarette in the morning increases significantly with CO cigarette yield and length of smoking experience. In the evening, only the cigarette yield has an effect on COHb level. Biomarker levels excreted in urine are generally lower for females than for males. They tend to increase with smoking history. Only COHb level and total urinary nicotine metabolites (Barlow index) are weakly correlated with cigarette yield. The absence of significant differences due to cigarette class in urinary biomarkers can be explained by changes in inhalation depth, individual differences of metabolism, and limited specificity of some markers (mutagens, thioethers).

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7501665     DOI: 10.1016/0091-3057(95)00089-f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacol Biochem Behav        ISSN: 0091-3057            Impact factor:   3.533


  7 in total

1.  Cigarette nicotine yields and nicotine intake among Japanese male workers.

Authors:  K Ueda; I Kawachi; M Nakamura; H Nogami; N Shirokawa; S Masui; A Okayama; A Oshima
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Review 2.  Cigarette Filter Ventilation and its Relationship to Increasing Rates of Lung Adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Min-Ae Song; Neal L Benowitz; Micah Berman; Theodore M Brasky; K Michael Cummings; Dorothy K Hatsukami; Catalin Marian; Richard O'Connor; Vaughan W Rees; Casper Woroszylo; Peter G Shields
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2017-12-01       Impact factor: 13.506

3.  ENDOGENOUS CARBON MONOXIDE CONCENTRATION IN BLOOD ELEVATES IN ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME OF NONSMOKER POPULATION.

Authors:  Atsushi Kobayashi; Hiroyuki Mizukami; Nobuo Sakamoto; Takayoshi Yamaki; Hiroyuki Kunii; Kazuhiko Nakazato; Yasuchika Takeishi
Journal:  Fukushima J Med Sci       Date:  2015-07-02

4.  Time spent with smoking parents and smoking topography in adolescents.

Authors:  Charles C Collins; Brad M Lippmann; Suzanne J Lo; Eric T Moolchan
Journal:  Addict Behav       Date:  2008-07-18       Impact factor: 3.913

5.  Mercapturic Acids Derived from the Toxicants Acrolein and Crotonaldehyde in the Urine of Cigarette Smokers from Five Ethnic Groups with Differing Risks for Lung Cancer.

Authors:  Sungshim L Park; Steven G Carmella; Menglan Chen; Yesha Patel; Daniel O Stram; Christopher A Haiman; Loic Le Marchand; Stephen S Hecht
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-06-08       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Status epilepticus and cardiopulmonary arrest in a patient with carbon monoxide poisoning with full recovery after using a neuroprotective strategy: a case report.

Authors:  Salman Abdulaziz; Ousama Dabbagh; Yaseen Arabi; Suleiman Kojan; Imad Hassan
Journal:  J Med Case Rep       Date:  2012-12-14

7.  Post-puff respiration measures on smokers of different tar yield cigarettes.

Authors:  F K St Charles; G R Krautter; D C Mariner
Journal:  Inhal Toxicol       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 2.724

  7 in total

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