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    Regul Toxicol Pharmacol. 2011 Dec 1;61(3 Suppl):S25-38. Epub 2010 Oct 16.

    A survey of mouth level exposure to cigarette smoke in the United States.

    Source

    R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, P.O. Box 1487, Winston-Salem, NC 27102-1487, USA. nelsonp@rjrt.com

    Abstract

    Smoke yields determined by a machine-based smoking method cannot adequately predict exposures experienced by human smokers. In this work, a filter analysis technique which addresses this fundamental limitation was used to measure mouth level exposures (MLE) to tar and nicotine in 1330 smokers of 26 brand-styles of US cigarettes covering a wide range of machine-generated yields. Despite the high degree of variability observed among individual smokers, MLEs were significantly correlated with machine-derived tar and nicotine yields (r=0.423 for nicotine MLE/cigarette; r=0.493 for tar MLE/cigarette; p<0.001 for both). Mean tar and nicotine MLE was higher for males than for females. Mean MLE across races was generally similar. Menthol cigarettes tended toward lower MLE than non-menthol cigarettes and King-Size cigarettes (≈ 83 mm) tended toward lower MLE than 100's cigarettes (≈ 100 mm), though those trends were not statistically significant. There were good agreements between MLEs measured in a group of 159 subjects smoking their usual cigarette brand-style on two separate occasions and between two independent groups of subjects smoking the same brand-styles. The results indicated that the filter analysis method used had sufficient precision to show similarity among groups.

    Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    PMID:
    20937343
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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