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Some short-term effects of changing to lower yield cigarettes.
Chest. 1985 Oct; 88(4):531-6.Chest

Abstract

The rate of clearance from the lung of the hydrophilic tracer molecule 99mTc DTPA was used to investigate the short-term effects on lung epithelial function when smokers switched to cigarettes with lower yields of tobacco smoke constituents. Two separate studies were performed. In the first study, subjects smoked conventional mid- and low-tar cigarettes. The second study used two specially manufactured cigarettes with similar tar and nicotine yields, but differing carbon monoxide yields. Neither study demonstrated any significant improvement in 99mTc DTPA clearance. The yields of carbon monoxide determined under standard machine smoking conditions implied that there would be a 44 percent reduction in exposure to carbon monoxide when subjects switched from smoking conventional mid-tar to low-tar cigarettes. However, measurements of carboxyhemoglobin showed that the smokers compensated for the lower yields and their exposure was reduced by only 11 percent. Similarly, in the second study, the subjects reduced their exposure by 7 percent instead of the expected 44 percent. Urine nicotine/cotinine excretion measurements in this study indicated that there was no complimentary increase in nicotine absorption suggesting the possibility that subjects may be able to regulate their intake of individual components of the cigarette smoke. Thus, the unexpected result from this study was the finding that cigarette smokers could, in some way, regulate their intake of smoke from cigarettes of different composition so as to maintain a constant exposure of smoke constituents.

Authors

No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

3899531

Citation

Minty, B D., et al. "Some Short-term Effects of Changing to Lower Yield Cigarettes." Chest, vol. 88, no. 4, 1985, pp. 531-6.
Minty BD, Royston D, Jones JG. Some short-term effects of changing to lower yield cigarettes. Chest. 1985;88(4):531-6.
Minty, B. D., Royston, D., & Jones, J. G. (1985). Some short-term effects of changing to lower yield cigarettes. Chest, 88(4), 531-6.
Minty BD, Royston D, Jones JG. Some Short-term Effects of Changing to Lower Yield Cigarettes. Chest. 1985;88(4):531-6. PubMed PMID: 3899531.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Some short-term effects of changing to lower yield cigarettes. AU - Minty,B D, AU - Royston,D, AU - Jones,J G, PY - 1985/10/1/pubmed PY - 1985/10/1/medline PY - 1985/10/1/entrez SP - 531 EP - 6 JF - Chest JO - Chest VL - 88 IS - 4 N2 - The rate of clearance from the lung of the hydrophilic tracer molecule 99mTc DTPA was used to investigate the short-term effects on lung epithelial function when smokers switched to cigarettes with lower yields of tobacco smoke constituents. Two separate studies were performed. In the first study, subjects smoked conventional mid- and low-tar cigarettes. The second study used two specially manufactured cigarettes with similar tar and nicotine yields, but differing carbon monoxide yields. Neither study demonstrated any significant improvement in 99mTc DTPA clearance. The yields of carbon monoxide determined under standard machine smoking conditions implied that there would be a 44 percent reduction in exposure to carbon monoxide when subjects switched from smoking conventional mid-tar to low-tar cigarettes. However, measurements of carboxyhemoglobin showed that the smokers compensated for the lower yields and their exposure was reduced by only 11 percent. Similarly, in the second study, the subjects reduced their exposure by 7 percent instead of the expected 44 percent. Urine nicotine/cotinine excretion measurements in this study indicated that there was no complimentary increase in nicotine absorption suggesting the possibility that subjects may be able to regulate their intake of individual components of the cigarette smoke. Thus, the unexpected result from this study was the finding that cigarette smokers could, in some way, regulate their intake of smoke from cigarettes of different composition so as to maintain a constant exposure of smoke constituents. SN - 0012-3692 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/3899531/Some_short_term_effects_of_changing_to_lower_yield_cigarettes_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -