Toxicant inhalation among singleton waterpipe tobacco users in natural settings

BackgroundStudies that assess waterpipe tobacco smoking behaviour and toxicant exposure generally use controlled laboratory environments with small samples that may not fully capture real-world variability in human behaviour and waterpipe products. This study aimed to conduct real-time sampling of w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tobacco control 2019-03, Vol.28 (2), p.181-188
Hauptverfasser: Jawad, Mohammed, Eissenberg, Thomas, Salman, Rola, Soule, Eric, Alzoubi, Karem H, Khabour, Omar F, Karaoghlanian, Nareg, Baalbaki, Rima, El Hage, Rachel, Saliba, Najat A, Shihadeh, Alan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BackgroundStudies that assess waterpipe tobacco smoking behaviour and toxicant exposure generally use controlled laboratory environments with small samples that may not fully capture real-world variability in human behaviour and waterpipe products. This study aimed to conduct real-time sampling of waterpipe tobacco use in natural environments using an in situ device.MethodsWe used the REALTIME sampling instrument: a validated, portable, self-powered device designed to sample automatically a fixed percentage of the aerosol flowing through the waterpipe mouthpiece during every puff. We recruited participants at café and home settings in Jordan and measured puffing behaviour in addition to inhalation exposure of total particulate matter (TPM), carbon monoxide (CO), nicotine, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and volatile aldehydes. We correlated total inhaled volume with five selected toxicants and calculated the regression line of this relationship.ResultsAveraged across 79 singleton sessions (52% male, mean age 27.0, 95% home sessions), sessions lasted 46.9 min and participants drew 290 puffs and inhaled 214 L per session. Mean quantities of inhaled toxicants per session were 1910 mg TPM, 259 mg CO, 5.0 mg nicotine, 117 ng benzo[a]pyrene and 198 ng formaldehyde. We found positive correlations between total inhaled volume and TPM (r=0.472; p
ISSN:0964-4563
1468-3318
DOI:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2017-054230