Smoking
Man
You know smoking
is bad for you. You know
inhaling someone else’s
smoke is bad for you. Now
a US study says third-hand
smoke tobacco residue clinging
to surfaces is also bad
for you.
When a cigarette burns,
nicotine is released in
the form of a vapor that
collects and condenses on
indoor surfaces such as
walls, carpeting, drapes
and furniture, where it
can linger for months, said
the study, which was published
in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences
(PNAS).
Our study
shows that when this residual
nicotine reacts with ambient
nitrous acid it forms carcinogenic
tobacco-specific nitrosamines,
or TSNAs, said Hugo Destaillats,
a corresponding author of
the study.

Smoking
Logo
TSNAs are
among the most broadly acting
and potent carcinogens present
in unburned tobacco and
tobacco smoke, he said.
The most likely
human exposure to TSNAs
is through either inhalation
of dust or the contact of
skin with carpet or clothes
— making third-hand
smoke particularly dangerous
to infants and toddlers.
Opening a window or turning
on a fan to air out a room
while a cigarette burns
does not eliminate the hazard
of third-hand smoke. Smoking
outdoors doesn’t help
much either.
Smoking outside
is better than smoking indoors
but nicotine residues will
stick to a smoker’s
skin and clothing, said
Lara Gundel, a co-author
of the study.
Those residues
follow a smoker back inside
and get spread everywhere.
The biggest risk is to young
children,” she said.
“Dermal uptake of
the nicotine through a child’s
skin is likely to occur
when the smoker returns
and if nitrous acid is in
the air, which it usually
is, then TSNAs will be formed.
Substantial
levels of TSNAs were also
found in the truck of a
heavy smoker, the study
says, adding that most vehicle
engines emit some nitrous
acid that can infiltrate
the passenger compartment
of a vehicle.
Researchers
from the Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory led
the study, which they say
is the first to quantify
the reactions of third-hand
smoke with nitrous acid.