Comparison of tobacco-containing and tobacco-free waterpipe products: Effects on human alveolar cells
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Oxford University Press
Abstract
Introduction: In recent years, a class of products marketed as tobacco-free alternatives for the health conscious user has become widely available for waterpipe (hookah, narghile, or shisha) smoking. Their adoption may be in part driven by regulations banning tobacco smoking in public places and by an increasing awareness of the hazards of waterpipe tobacco smoking. Although these products are presented in advertising as a healthier choice, very little is known about their health effects. Methods: In this study, we compared the effects of smoke generated with tobacco-free and conventional tobacco-derived products on human alveolar cells. Smoke was generated with a smoking machine that precisely mimicked the puffing behavior of 15 experienced waterpipe smokers when they used conventional waterpipe tobacco products of their choice and flavor-matched tobacco-free products. Human alveolar epithelial cells (A549) were treated with particulate matter sampled from the smoke, and the effects on cell cycle, proliferation, and doubling time were measured during the subsequent 72 hr. Results: We found that smoke from both types of waterpipe products markedly reduced cell proliferation, caused cell cycle arrest at G0/G1, and increased cell doubling time. There were no significant differences across product in any measure. Conclusion: Tobacco-free and tobacco-based waterpipe products exert substantial and similar deleterious effects on human lung cells. This study adds to the nascent evidence base indicating that except for exposure to nicotine and its derivatives, use of tobacco-free waterpipe products does not present a reduced health risk relative to the use of conventional tobacco-based products. ©The Author 2013. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. All rights reserved.
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Keywords
Adolescent, Adult, Cell cycle checkpoints, Cell line, Cell proliferation, Epithelial cells, Humans, Middle aged, Pulmonary alveoli, Smoke, Smoking, Tobacco products, Young adult, Tobacco smoke, Article, Cell cycle arrest, Cell cycle g0 phase, Cell cycle g1 phase, Cell damage, Comparative study, Controlled study, Human, Human cell, Lung alveolus epithelium, Normal human, Particulate matter, Priority journal, Tobacco, Topography, Adverse effects, Cell cycle checkpoint, Cytology, Drug effects, Epithelium cell, Lung alveolus