Tobacco industry research and efforts to manipulate smoke particle size: implications for product regulation

Nicotine & Tobacco Research : Official Journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco
Geoffrey Ferris WayneWilliam A Farone

Abstract

Over the past half-century of cigarette design, tobacco manufacturers have prioritized efficiency of delivery alongside ease of inhalation and use. As a result, the modern cigarette is uniquely effective at facilitating the absorption of nicotine as well as carcinogens and other toxins. The present study draws on internal tobacco company documents to assess industry consideration of the role of smoke particle size as a potentially controllable influence over inhalation patterns and lung exposure. Tobacco manufacturers evaluated particle size manipulation both as a means of controlling physical and sensory product attributes and as a possible approach to reducing health hazards related to exposure. Industry scientists concluded that the smoke aerosol particle distribution of conventional cigarettes, constructed within common parameters, falls within a narrow and effective inhalation range. However, the internal findings suggest that differences in smoke particle size distribution are possible through less conventional approaches to product design. We propose that particle size be included among the many design features to be considered in emerging tobacco product regulation. However, the present review does not address whether p...Continue Reading

Citations

Sep 23, 2014·Preventive Medicine·Jack E Henningfield
Mar 8, 2011·Drug and Alcohol Dependence·Jack E HenningfieldEllen Peters
Apr 14, 2009·Pharmacology & Therapeutics·Jack E HenningfieldEllen R Gritz
May 20, 2017·Journal of the National Cancer Institute·Min-Ae SongPeter G Shields
Jan 15, 2014·Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention : a Publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, Cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology·K Michael Cummings, Robert N Proctor

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