News Release Julie
Chao
Ever walked into a hotel
room and smelled old cigarette smoke? While the last smoker may have left the
room hours or even days ago, the lingering odors—resulting from noxious residue
that clings to walls, carpets, furniture, or dust particles—are thanks to
thirdhand smoke.
Scientists at the U.S.
Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab),
who have made important findings on the dangers of thirdhand smoke and how it
adsorbs strongly onto indoor surfaces, have published a new study assessing the
health effects of thirdhand smoke constituents present in indoor air. Looking
at levels of more than 50 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and airborne particles
for 18 hours after smoking had taken place; they found that thirdhand smoke
continues to have harmful health impacts for many hours after a cigarette has
been extinguished.
“In the U.S., the home is
now where nonsmokers are most exposed to second- and thirdhand smoke. The goal
of our study is to provide information supporting effective protective measures
in the home. The amount of harm is measurable even several hours after smoking
ends,” said chemist Hugo Destaillats, lead author of the study. “Many smokers
know secondhand smoke is harmful,
so they don’t smoke when their kids are
present. But if, for example, they stop smoking at 2 p.m. and the kids come
home at 4 p.m., our work shows that up to 60 percent of the harm from inhaling
thirdhand smoke remains.”
Their study, “Inhalable Constituents of Thirdhand
Tobacco Smoke: Chemical Characterization and Health Impact Considerations,” has been published
online in the journal Environmental
Science & Technology. Other co-authors were Berkeley Lab
scientists Mohamad Sleiman, Jennifer Logue, and Lara Gundel, and Portland State
University professor James F. Pankow and researcher Wentai Luo.
The Berkeley Lab team has
done previous studies establishing
the formation of harmful thirdhand smoke constituents by reaction of nicotine
with indoor nitrous acid, showing
that nicotine can react with ozone to form potentially harmful
ultrafine particles, and finding that thirdhand
smoke can cause genetic damage in human cells. These
studies focused primarily on chemical contaminants adsorbed to indoor surfaces,
entering the human body through dermal uptake or ingestion of dust. The new
study focuses on a third type of exposure, inhalation. The study shows that
this route of exposure, even after the smoke dissipates, is also significant.
The team collected data
from two environments: one was a room-sized chamber at Berkeley Lab where six
cigarettes were machine-smoked and levels of particulate matter and 58 VOCs
were monitored during an aging period of 18 hours; the second was a smoker’s
home, where field measurements were made 8 hours after the last cigarette was
smoked. Logue led the health analysis, using an impact assessment approach that
she has used for studying indoor air pollutants.
Health data was available
for only about half of the measured chemicals. For those Logue used a metric
called DALY, or disability-adjusted life year, to quantify the health impact.
The DALY is commonly used by the World Health Organization (WHO) and others in
the public health field as a way to combine loss of life with loss of quality
of life in a single metric.
Looking at DALYs lost as a
function of time, the study found that the total integrated harm rises sharply
in the first five hours after a cigarette has been smoked, continues to rise
for another five hours, and doesn’t start to level off until after 10 hours.
“We ranked the health
damage due to each of the pollutants for which we had data,” Logue said. “We
found that particulate matter, or PM2.5, accounted for
90 percent of the health damage.”
PM2.5, or particles that are less than 2.5 micrometers
in diameter, can be inhaled deeply into the lungs and cause serious health
problems. The study identified also those tobacco VOCs with the highest health
impacts, some of which exceeded concentrations considered harmful by the state
of California over the entire 18-hour period.
The researchers caution
that this was an initial scoping study, in which they had to rely on health
data available for outdoor air particles. Common outdoor sources include
vehicle exhaust, forest fires, and burning of fuels. “Tobacco particles have a
different composition than outdoor air particles, but there are chemical
similarities,” Gundel said. “This is a first-order approximation.”
Another purpose of the
study was to better understand the transition between secondhand smoke and
thirdhand smoke. Depending on the criteria used, the predicted health damage
caused by thirdhand smoke could range from 5 percent to 60 percent of the total
harm. “A lot of the harm attributed to secondhand smoke could be due to
thirdhand smoke,” Gundel said. “Because there’s a gradual transition from one
to the other, we don’t really know yet what the chronic effects of thirdhand
smoke are.”
The study is part of a
research agenda developed by the California
Consortium on Thirdhand Smoke, which was established in
2011 largely as a result of work published in 2010 by Destaillats, Gundel,
Sleiman, and others. The Consortium, which includes researchers from Berkeley
Lab, UC San Francisco, UC Riverside, the University of Southern California, and
San Diego State University, is funded by the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program, managed by the University
of California. Its goals are better understanding the health effects of
thirdhand smoke, identifying the most effective control policies and practices
to protect nonsmokers, and developing methods to remediate indoor environments
contaminated with thirdhand smoke.
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Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory addresses the world’s most urgent scientific challenges by advancing
sustainable energy, protecting human health, creating new materials, and
revealing the origin and fate of the universe. Founded in 1931, Berkeley Lab’s
scientific expertise has been recognized with 13 Nobel prizes. The University
of California manages Berkeley Lab for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office
of Science. For more, visit www.lbl.gov. DOE’s Office of Science
is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in
the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing
challenges of our time. For more information, please visit science.energy.gov.
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