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Nicotine and cotinine in adults' urine: The German Environmental Survey 1998.

TLDR
Exposure to tobacco smoke in the workplace doubled the risk for the detection of nicotine and cotinine in urine, and protection of nonsmokers from smoking family members at home needs more attention.
Abstract
In 1998, the German Environmental Survey (GerES III) recruited approximately 5000 adults between the ages of 18 and 69 years. The study population for these analyses consisted of 1580 smokers (34% of the total population) and 3126 nonsmokers. Nicotine and cotinine concentrations in urine were determined by HPLC methods with UV-detection and corrected for creatinine. Nicotine and cotinine concentrations differed between smokers and nonsmokers by factors of 10–100. The multiple linear regression models used for the analyses of nicotine detection in the urine of smokers explained 43.2% and 42.3% of the total volume-specific and creatinine-specific variances, respectively. Cigarette smoking was the major factor responsible for 41% of the total variance. The explained variances of the cotinine results were larger, 51.0% and 49.3% of the total variance were volume-specific and creatinine-specific, respectively. More than 20% of nonsmokers in GerES III were exposed to environmental tobacco smoke at home, at work or in other places. The logistic regression analysis approach used for the group of nonsmokers showed the greatest effects for those exposed to tobacco smoke at home (adjusted OR varied between 4 and 6). These results were seen for nicotine as well as for cotinine excretion. Exposure to tobacco smoke in the workplace doubled the risk for the detection of nicotine and cotinine in urine. When other risk factors such as age, sex, social status, community size, season of urine collection, and the consumption of food containing nicotine such as potatoes, cabbage, tea were included, the effect estimates for tobacco smoke exposure remained unchanged. A new federal bill to diminish environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure in the workplace was recently passed in Germany, but protection of nonsmokers from smoking family members at home needs more attention.

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Citations
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Rapid Activation of Stat3 and ERK1/2 by Nicotine Modulates Cell Proliferation in Human Bladder Cancer Cells

TL;DR: It is concluded that through nAChR and beta-adrenoceptors, nicotine activates ERK1/2 and Stat3 signaling pathways, leading to Cyclin D1 expression and cell proliferation, in bladder cells.
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Prenatal nicotine exposure and child behavioural problems.

TL;DR: Considering the results of an increasing number of studies which link prenatal exposure to nicotine to externalising problems applying different methodologies to account for confounding and in view of other adverse health effects known to be caused by this exposure, parents should consider smoking cessation.
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Environmental and biological monitoring of exposures to PAHs and ETS in the general population

TL;DR: ETS is a significant source of inhalation exposure to the carcinogen 1,3-butadiene and high molecular weight PAHs, many of which are carcinogenic, and that for lower molecular weightPAHs such as naphthalene, exposure by routes other than inhalation predominate, since metabolite levels correlated poorly with personal exposure air sampling.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The validity of self-reported smoking: a review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Self-reports of smoking are accurate in most studies, but biochemical assessment, preferably with cotinine plasma, should be considered in intervention studies and student populations to improve accuracy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cotinine as a Biomarker of Environmental Tobacco Smoke Exposure

TL;DR: A biomarker is desirable in quantitating systemic exposure both in smokers and nonsmokers to constituents of tobacco smoke to reflect exposure to toxic constituents of smoke that are of concern.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exposure of the US Population to Environmental Tobacco Smoke: The Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988 to 1991

TL;DR: In this article, the authors estimate the extent of exposure of the US population to environmental tobacco smoke and the contribution of the home and workplace environment to environmental Tobacco smoke exposure in the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Cigarette Smoking on Lung Function in Adolescent Boys and Girls

TL;DR: Whereas girls who did not smoke reached a plateau of lung function at 17 to 18 years of age, girls of the same age who smoked had a decline of FEV1 and FEF25-75, and adolescent girls may be more vulnerable than boys to the effects of smoking on the growth of lungfunction.
Journal ArticleDOI

German Environmental Survey 1998 (GerES III): environmental pollutants in blood of the German population.

TL;DR: The German Environmental Survey was conducted for the third time in 1998 (GerES III) and the probability sample of about 4800 subjects was selected to be representative for the German population with regard to region, community size, age and gender.
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