Air
Purification
Second-hand Smoke
Wives of Smokers
Absorb
Cancer Chemicals From Smoke
HealthCentral - March 07, 2001
WASHINGTON (AP) - Levels of chemicals
linked to lung cancer are five to six times higher in the urine of women who live with
smokers than in women who live with non-smokers, according to a new study.
The study is the first to demonstrate
that tobacco smoke carcinogens - chemicals that cause cancer - are absorbed by people who
live in homes with smokers. The study appears Wednesday in the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute.
"A number of studies have shown a
connection between environmental tobacco smoke and lung cancer," said Stephen S.
Hecht, the Wallin Professor of Cancer Prevention at the University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis. "Our study provides the first biochemical support for this data."
Hecht, a co-author of the study, said that
analyzing the urine of nonsmoking wives of men who smoke at home shows that the women's
bodies absorb cancer-causing compounds from the atmosphere through their lungs. The study
found elevated levels of compounds called NNAL and NNAL-Gluc, both of which are
metabolized products of NNK, a proven, tobacco-specific cancer-causing chemical.
"It is clear that environmental tobacco
smoke has all the carcinogens that are contained in tobacco smoke," said Hecht.
In the study, researchers analyzed the urine
from 23 women who lived with men who smoked in the home and compared the results with
urine from 22 women who lived with non-smokers.
The results showed that women who lived with
smokers had levels of NNAL and NNAL-Gluc that was five to six times higher than for women
who lived with non-smokers.
Women who lived with smokers had similarly
elevated levels of nicotine and cotinine, a metabolic product of nicotine.
Other studies have shown that environmental
tobacco smoke increases the risk of lung cancer for non-smokers who work where cigarette
and cigar smoking is common, such as bars or taverns. Additionally, studies have shown
that children living in the homes of smokers have a higher incidence of asthma and other
respiratory problems.
Hecht said that tobacco smoke in homes with
central heating and air conditioning systems tends to spread throughout a house.
"If you smoke in one part of a house, the
smoke doesn't just stay in that part," said Hecht. "About the only safe thing
that a woman who lives with a smoker can do is to tell him to go outside when he
smokes."
Source: Health Central
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