Assessment of passive and transplacental exposure to tobacco smoke
- PMID: 3198195
Assessment of passive and transplacental exposure to tobacco smoke
Abstract
Although tobacco smoke has been shown to be highly genotoxic in various experimental systems, most nonmolecular methods designed to assess exposure to mutagens are too insensitive to detect passive exposure to tobacco smoke. Biochemical markers of intake--cotinine and thiocyanates in body fluids--were shown to be elevated after occupational, passive or transplacental exposure to tobacco smoke, while no response was seen in the frequency of sister chromatid exchanges (SCE) in cultured blood lymphocytes. After occupational exposure to environmental tobacco smoke, the intake marker levels are generally less than 5% of the levels found in active smokers, while cord blood levels (representing fetal exposure) are at about the same level as in the mothers at the time of delivery.
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