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[Markers for smoking].
Pathol Biol (Paris). 1992 Dec; 40(10):1015-21.PB

Abstract

Quantitative and objective measurement of exposure to cigarette smoke by assays of chemical markers is desirable, especially in preventive medicine, since the negative health effects of tobacco smoke are well documented. Chemical markers include nicotine and cotinine in plasma, urine, and saliva; carbon monoxide in exhaled air; carboxyhemoglobin in blood and thiocyanate in biological fluids. Ease of use, cost, specificity, and sensitivity vary across markers. Determination of the thiocyanate/creatinine ratio in urine is a reliable, noninvasive, and inexpensive test for evaluating exposure to cigarette smoke. No marker for cumulative exposure to cigarette smoke is available to date. The plasma level of fluorescent lipoperoxides may provide an estimation of the in vivo toxicity of exposure to cigarette smoke.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Laboratoire de Biochimie Clinique, UFR de Médecine de l'Université Paris-Nord, Bobigny, France.

Pub Type(s)

English Abstract
Journal Article
Review

Language

fre

PubMed ID

1299808

Citation

Pré, J. "[Markers for Smoking]." Pathologie-biologie, vol. 40, no. 10, 1992, pp. 1015-21.
Pré J. [Markers for smoking]. Pathol Biol (Paris). 1992;40(10):1015-21.
Pré, J. (1992). [Markers for smoking]. Pathologie-biologie, 40(10), 1015-21.
Pré J. [Markers for Smoking]. Pathol Biol (Paris). 1992;40(10):1015-21. PubMed PMID: 1299808.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - [Markers for smoking]. A1 - Pré,J, PY - 1992/12/1/pubmed PY - 1992/12/1/medline PY - 1992/12/1/entrez SP - 1015 EP - 21 JF - Pathologie-biologie JO - Pathol Biol (Paris) VL - 40 IS - 10 N2 - Quantitative and objective measurement of exposure to cigarette smoke by assays of chemical markers is desirable, especially in preventive medicine, since the negative health effects of tobacco smoke are well documented. Chemical markers include nicotine and cotinine in plasma, urine, and saliva; carbon monoxide in exhaled air; carboxyhemoglobin in blood and thiocyanate in biological fluids. Ease of use, cost, specificity, and sensitivity vary across markers. Determination of the thiocyanate/creatinine ratio in urine is a reliable, noninvasive, and inexpensive test for evaluating exposure to cigarette smoke. No marker for cumulative exposure to cigarette smoke is available to date. The plasma level of fluorescent lipoperoxides may provide an estimation of the in vivo toxicity of exposure to cigarette smoke. SN - 0369-8114 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/1299808/[Markers_for_smoking]_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -