This is actually ugly. I would posit that all other obvious
carcinogens produced by the combustion process are readily handled by
the body itself since we have actually been doing just so for
millennia.
The problem is alpha emitters of any kind. Outside the body, they
are effectively harmless. Recall how Radium glows so nicely and
harmlessly. Inside they are in immediate contact and overwhelm the
adjacent cells to trigger radiation induced carcinomas. I suspect
that the body finds it difficult to remove these islands and the
problems accumulate until the body is overwhelmed.
Why do we not know this and why do we not place a direct warning on
our labels? Is it possible that heavy smoking with washed leaves
hugely drops the cancer rate and even allows the industry to
continue? Look at the second item. There we discover that the
direct comparable is cancer free.
Suddenly, it is plausible to make tobacco cancer free. Now we need
to make it addiction free and we may have another effective drug
delivery system.
So About That
‘Glowing’ Cigarette…
BY DEBORAH BLUM
12.14.12
By the end of the
1920s, scientists already knew that tobacco smoke contained a small
encyclopedia’s worth of risky chemical compounds: carbon
monoxide and hydrogen cyanide, hydrogen sulfide and formaldehyde,
ammonia and pyridine (a component in industrial solvents).
I discovered that list
when I was researching my book about early 20th century
toxicology, The Poisoner’s Handbook. And I remember being
surprised because I had believed that it wasn’t until the mid-20th
century, maybe a little before the famed 1964 U.S. Surgeon
General report on the dangers of smoking – that we really knew
anything about the health risks of smoking.
Of course, that 1920s
list turns out to only be the bare start of the one we’ve assembled
today. By some counts, there are a good 4,000 chemical
compounds in cigarettes and, of those, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration classifies more than 100 as dangerous (from
carcinogenic to addictive). Given the body of evidence, linking
cigarette smoking to disease, it’s not necessarily a surprise to
find that the smoke contains well-known bad actors ranging
from arsenic to toluene.
Still, I’ll confess
to being startled last week when I was researching the suspected
radiation poisoning of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and
discovered that one of the most common sources of radiation
exposure is through smoking cigarettes. I wrote about that in the
context of the recent exhumation of Arafat’s body and the toxicity
texts underway in a post called “Yasser Arafat and the Radioactive
Cigarette.”
And when I read the
FDA list of hazardous compounds in cigarette smoke and found not
only polonium-210 (the radioactive element suspected in Arafat’s
death) but two well-known isotopes of uranium best
associated with nuclear reactors (uranium-235 and uranium-238), I
thought – wow, how did I miss that?
As it turns out,
there’s a real case to be made that I – and really all of us –
missed this because the tobacco companies hid the information, that
cigarette makers flagged the problem internally by 1960s and studied
it in secret. The best evidence for that comes from the
companies’ confidential documents, which were released in
the 1998 Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement between four
major companies – Philip Morris, R.J. Reynolds, Brown &
Williamson and Lorillard – and attorney generals from 46 states.
An analysis of those
documents by public health researchers at the University of
California-Los Angeles was published last year in the
journal, Nicotine and Tobacco Research. As
that study(paywall) notes:
The documents show
that the industry was well aware of the presence of a radioactive
substance in tobacco as early as 1959. Furthermore, the industry was
not only cognizant of the potential “cancerous growth” in the
lungs of regular smokers but also did quantitative radiobiological
calculations to estimate the long-term (25 years) lung radiation
absorption dose (rad) of ionizing alpha particles emitted from the
cigarette smoke.
This wasn’t the
first study to note the corporate coverup; an earlier
report in American Journal of Public Health reached
the same conclusion. Still, let’s call the information an
imperfectly kept secret (as so many are). In 1964, for instance, we
find scientists from the Harvard School of Public Health
reporting that they had discovered hot spots, fizzing with
polonium-210, in the lungs of regular smokers. They
published that finding in the highly visible New England Journal of
Medicine in 1965, warning that “we believe 210Po may be an
important factor in the initiation of bronchial carcinoma in
humans”. It wasn’t, actually, that tobacco companies were
entirely successful at hiding the radioactive nature of cigarettes;
it was that the rest of us weren’t entirely successful at paying
attention.
But, as the UCLA
analysis points out, internal documents revealed something else. Not
only did cigarette makers know about polonium-210 contamination of
their product for decades – they knew how to fix it and chose
not to. And to understand that, you need to know why tobacco plants
become such little radiation factories.
The radioactive
elements occur naturally in the Earth’s crust. So it’s not
surprising to find them in soils where crops are grown. In the
case of tobacco, this effect tends to be amplified because the most
commonly used fertilizers for that plant are phosphate-rich mixtures
based on the mineral apatite. And apatite is known to mix up with
radioactive elements. Or as the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency puts it: “When phosphate fertilizer is spread on the tobacco
fields year after year, the concentration of lead-210 and
polonoium-210 in the soil rises.” When the soil is stirred up –
by planting, plowing, wind, whatever – radioactive particles drift
into the air, attach to dust and other particulates there. As these
settle back down to the ground, they are often trapped by the
naturally sticky leaves of the tobacco plant.
These radioactive
residues can be removed by acid-washing the plants. But the
documents obtained by the California researchers showed that
manufacturers refused to do that for fears that the acid would alter
the nicotine and decrease the chemical kick that helps make the
products popular. The UCLA analysts went on to calculate the
resulting radiation health risk from regular smoking, based in part
on the industry’s own analysis. They set the cost of such
alpha radiation in the lungs at 120-138 cancer deaths per 1,000
regular smokers.
As a story by British
science writer Ed Yong points out, these are tricky numbers to
set because the radiation dose comes in a smoke fog of treacherous
chemistry. But as he also points there’s no disagreement that
having polonium-210 delivered directly to the lungs is a very bad
idea. This is a highly energetic element, with a half-life
of only 138 days; it’s considered 5,000 times as radioactive as
radium. Like radium, it primarily emits alpha particles which,
although, not particularly dangerous outside body (they lose energy
on impact and don’t penetrate skin) wreak havoc once inside.
But inside the body,
alpha particles are capable of doing wide-spread harm.
Polonium-210 lodges in cells of the lungs like little hissing balls
of radiation. It travels easily elsewhere in the body, irradiating
tissue as it goes. It settles into and destroys bone marrow,
causing a host of blood-related disorders. At smoker-related exposure
levels, health expects thus warn of diseases, such as cancer, that
follow a kind of chronic, radiation-induced injury. At high levels,
though, polonium-210 kills with relative speed.
The classic example is
the 2006 death of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko, who was
purportedly killed by KGB agents who slipped polonium-210 into his
drink during a meeting in London. Litveninko died just three
weeks after that November meeting. British police say there is enough
evidence to charge two Russian agents with his death but Russia has
refused to extradite them and –even today – angrily denies
the accusations.
Which brings us back
to the other possible assassination, the suspected poisoning of
the Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, who died in 2004. A months
long investigation by Al Jazeera, which included testing of his
clothes and even his famous checked kaffiyeh, found some unexpectedly
high traces of polonium-210. The publication of those results in July
led to calls for further testing and last month his body was exhumed
and tissue and bone samples sent to three laboratories (one,
ironically, in Russia). Results are not expected until early next
year.
In my post last week,
I pointed out that a possible explanation for evidence of
polonium-210 exposure could, in fact, be cigarette smoke.
Arafat and his colleagues in the Ramallah compound were known to be
heavy smokers. Of course, I also somewhat undermined that idea by
also pointing out that Israel had been known to restrict Arafat’s
access to tobacco as a form of petty punishment. In other words, it’s
worth exploring all possibilities but keeping them ones that make
most sense.
It might be, as I’ve
suggested, that a smoky environment accounted for some of the
polonium-210 traces in Arafat’s clothing. But there’s still no
clear evidence that smoking killed him; no clear evidence that he was
a victim of one of those polonium-201 induced lung cancers or similar
illness. So, beyond the first stage of this investigation, if
forensic work is able to show a lethal exposure then – as in the
case of Litvinenko – we will indeed be talking about assassination
and all its ugly and messy implications.
But while we wait, let
me just emphasize my other point. Let me just quote you the
closing line of that UCLA look at radiation in cigarettes: “The
evidence of lung cancer risk caused by cigarette smoke radioactivity
is compelling enough to warrant its removal.” After all these
years, it would be gratifying to see that message get a little
traction too. And that conclusion, we can safely call an
understatement.
May
26, 2006 — People who smoke marijuana--even heavy, long-term
marijuana users--do not appear to be at increased risk of developing
lung cancer, according to a study to be presented at the American
Thoracic Society International Conference on May 23rd.
Marijuana smoking also
did not appear to increase the risk of head and neck cancers, such as
cancer of the tongue, mouth, throat, or esophagus, the study found.
The findings were a
surprise to the researchers. "We expected that we would find
that a history of heavy marijuana use--more than 500-1,000
uses--would increase the risk of cancer from several years to decades
after exposure to marijuana," said the senior researcher, Donald
Tashkin, M.D., Professor of Medicine at the David Geffen School of
Medicine at UCLA in Los Angeles.
The study looked at
611 people in Los Angeles County who developed lung cancer, 601 who
developed cancer of the head or neck regions, and 1,040 people
without cancer who were matched on age, gender and neighborhood. The
researchers used the University of Southern California Tumor
Registry, which is notified as soon as a patient in Los Angeles
County receives a diagnosis of cancer.
They limited the study
to people under age 60. "If you were born prior to 1940, you
were unlikely to be exposed to marijuana use during your teens and
20s--the time of peak marijuana use," Dr. Tashkin said. People
who were exposed to marijuana use in their youth are just now getting
to the age when cancer typically starts to develop, he added.
Subjects were asked
about lifetime use of marijuana, tobacco and alcohol, as well as
other drugs, their diet, occupation, family history of cancer and
socioeconomic status. The subjects' reported use of marijuana was
similar to that found in other surveys, Dr. Tashkin noted.
The heaviest smokers
in the study had smoked more than 22,000 marijuana cigarettes, or
joints, while moderately heavy smokers had smoked between 11,000 to
22,000 joints. Even these smokers did not have an increased risk of
developing cancer. People who smoked more marijuana were not at any
increased risk compared with those who smoked less marijuana or none
at all.
The study found that
80% of lung cancer patients and 70% of patients with head and neck
cancer had smoked tobacco, while only about half of patients with
both types of cancer smoked marijuana.
There was a clear
association between smoking tobacco and cancer. The study found a
20-fold increased risk of lung cancer in people who smoked two or
more packs of cigarettes a day. The more tobacco a person smoked, the
greater the risk of developing both lung cancer and head and neck
cancers, findings that were consistent with many previous studies.
The new findings are
surprising for several reasons, Dr. Tashkin said. Previous studies
have shown that marijuana tar contains about 50% higher
concentrations of chemicals linked to lung cancer, compared with
tobacco tar, he noted. Smoking a marijuana cigarette deposits four
times more tar in the lungs than smoking an equivalent amount of
tobacco. "Marijuana is packed more loosely than tobacco, so
there's less filtration through the rod of the cigarette, so more
particles will be inhaled," Dr. Tashkin said. "And
marijuana smokers typically smoke differently than tobacco
smokers--they hold their breath about four times longer, allowing
more time for extra fine particles to deposit in the lung."
One possible
explanation for the new findings, he said, is that THC, a chemical in
marijuana smoke, may encourage aging cells to die earlier and
therefore be less likely to undergo cancerous transformation.
The next step, Dr.
Tashkin says, is to study the DNA samples of the subjects, to see
whether there are some heavy marijuana users who may be at increased
risk of developing cancer if they have a genetic susceptibility for
cancer.
1 comment:
That tobacco study strikes me as meaningless blab unless it has rates for non-smokers who eat the food grown in the radioactive wasteland next to the field of tobacco, where you eat the same amount of uranium as the smoker smokes.
On top of that is also the rates of cancer caused by the Americans, the British, the French, the Russians and the Chinese (plus others) who blew thousands of tons of highly radioactive dust into the upper atmosphere and left us all to breathe it and get it onto our skin over the last 50years.
I am quite unsurprised at the increasing rates of skin & lung cancer.
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