Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Diluted aqueous extract of heat-not-burn tobacco product smoke causes less oxidative damage in fibroblasts than conventional cigarette

Qinying Lyu, Li Jiang, Hao Zheng, Shotaro Hayashi, Kotaro Sato, Shinya Toyokuni

Journal of Clinical Biochemistry and Nutrition · 2022

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Summary

Smoke from conventional cigarettes (C-cigarettes) contains various reactive oxygen species and toxic chemicals, which potentially cause oxidative damage not only to airways but also to the whole body, leading eventually to diseases, including emphysema, advanced atherosclerosis, and cancer. Many heat-not-burn tobacco products (HTPs) have been commercialized recently in Japan to maintain the smoking population by advertising that HTPs are less toxic. However, there were few studies reported from neutral organizations whether HTPs are indeed less damaging. To evaluate the potential capacity of HTPs to induce oxidative stress, we here compared two different HTPs with two types of C-cigarettes, using human fibroblast IMR90SV cells and 5% aqueous extracts in 10-ml phosphate-buffered saline (50-

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.3164/jcbn.21-134
Catalogue ID
SNmoi53kcb-lvlvp6
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