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Respiratory Exposure to Thirdhand Cigarette Smoke Increases Concentrations of Urinary Metabolites of Nicotine.

Kelly PrattAndrew HiltyPeyton JacobSuzaynn F Schick
Published in: Nicotine & tobacco research : official journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (2023)
This study shows that a three-hour inhalational exposure to the tobacco smoke aerosol that forms in a room that has been smoked in and left unventilated overnight causes increases in urinary metabolites of nicotine, but not of the tobacco-specific nitrosamine NNK. This suggests that cleaning personnel and others who live and work in rooms polluted with aged or thirdhand cigarette smoke regularly may have inhalational exposures and potential health effects related to their exposure to nicotine and other smoke toxicants.
Keyphrases
  • smoking cessation
  • ms ms
  • blood pressure
  • air pollution
  • respiratory tract
  • climate change
  • drug induced