Search results for "Tobacco"

showing 10 items of 323 documents

Passive exposure to nicotine from e-cigarettes

2016

A procedure based on the use of ion mobility spectrometry (IMS), after liquid-liquid microextraction (LLME), has been successfully employed for the determination of passive exposure to nicotine from cigarette and e-cigarette smoking. Nicotine has been determined in exhaled breath and oral fluids of both, active and passive smokers. The aforementioned studies, made in closed environments, evidenced that the exhaled breath after conventional blend cigarette smoke provides nicotine levels of the order of 220 ng per puff, in the case of experienced smokers, being exhaled only 32 ng in the case of e-cigarettes. On the other hand, the nicotine amount in oral fluids of passive vapers was between 8…

Bodily SecretionsNicotineLiquid Phase MicroextractionElectronic Nicotine Delivery Systems01 natural sciencesAnalytical ChemistryNicotine03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineHumansCigarette smoke030212 general & internal medicineChromatographyChemistry010401 analytical chemistryEnvironmental ExposurePassive ExposureEnvironmental exposureExhaled air0104 chemical sciencesBreath TestsOral fluidTobacco Smoke PollutionBodily secretionsmedicine.drugTalanta
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Carbocysteine counteracts the effects of cigarette smoke on cell growth and on the SIRT1/FoxO3 axis in bronchial epithelial cells

2016

Abstract Background Cigarette smoke may accelerate cellular senescence by increasing oxidative stress. Altered proliferation and altered expression of anti-aging factors, including SIRT1 and FoxO3, characterise cellular senescence. The effects of carbocysteine on the SIRT1/FoxO3 axis and on downstream molecular mechanisms in human bronchial epithelial cells exposed to cigarette smoke are largely unknown. Aims Aim of this study was to explore whether carbocysteine modulated SIRT1/FoxO3 axis, and downstream molecular mechanisms associated to cellular senescence, in a bronchial epithelial cell line (16-HBE) exposed to cigarette smoke. Methods 16HBE cells were stimulated with/without cigarette …

Bronchial epithelial cell0301 basic medicineSenescenceAgingPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyApoptosisSettore MED/10 - Malattie Dell'Apparato RespiratorioBiologyBiochemistryCell LineFlow cytometry03 medical and health sciencesSIRT10302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyGeneticSirtuin 1Western blotSmokeTobaccoSurvivinGeneticsmedicineHumansClonogenic assayMolecular BiologyCellular SenescenceCell ProliferationRegulation of gene expressionmedicine.diagnostic_testCell growthCarbocysteineForkhead Box Protein O3Cigarette smokeEpithelial CellsCarbocysteineCell BiologyCell biologyOxidative Stress030104 developmental biology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisFoxO3Experimental Gerontology
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Rôle de la dynamique de la membrane plasmique dans la mise en place des réactions de défense chez le tabac

2008

The binding of cryptogein, a plant defense elicitor secreted by an oomycete, to an unknown receptor triggers well-known biochemical events of early signal transduction at the plasma membrane of tobacco cells. One of these early events is the transient production of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) by an NADPH oxidase, NtrbohD. We were thus interested to analyze the dynamic of the plasma membrane during these early stages. We determined that internalization of the endocytotic marker FM4-64 is stimulated a few minutes after addition of cryptogein to tobacco BY-2 cells. This stimulation is specific to the signal transduction pathway elicited by cryptogein since a lipid transfer protein, which bin…

CELLULES DE TABAC BY-2[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]BY-2 TOBACCO CELLSELICITEUR DE REACTIONS DE DEFENSE[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]DEFENSE REACTIONSELICITORMEMBRANE PLASMIQUEENDOCYTOSE A CLATHRINECLATHIN-MEDIATED ENDOCYTOSIS
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A Study of the Effect of Proinflammatory Cytokines on the Epithelial Cells of Smokers, With or Without COPD

2011

Introduction: Cigarette smoke is the main cause of inflammation in COPD. The mechanisms that differentiate smokers who develop COPD are diverse. In this study, we analyzed the presence of cytokines in the respiratory secretions of smokers with or without COPD and the secretory properties of the differentiated bronchial epithelium obtained from the individuals themselves after exposure to tobacco smoke. Material and methods: Twenty-seven smokers were studied, 12 of whom had COPD that had not been previously treated with steroids. In 11, samples were obtained by means of induced sputum, and the remaining samples were collected from bronchial aspiration after bronchoscopy. Concentrations of IL…

COPDPathologymedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryInflammationGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseGastroenterologyTobacco smokerespiratory tract diseasesProinflammatory cytokineBronchoscopyInternal medicinemedicineTumor necrosis factor alphaInterleukin 8Respiratory systemmedicine.symptombusinessArchivos de Bronconeumología (English Edition)
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NO signaling in cryptogein-induced immune responses in tobacco

2014

SPEIPM; International audience

CalmodulinTobacco[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal Biology[SDV.BV] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal BiologyCryptogeinCalciumNitric oxidePAMPplant immunityNO
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Patterns of Carbon-Bound Exogenous Compounds in Patients with Lung Cancer and Association with Disease Pathophysiology.

2021

Abstract Asymptomatic anthracosis is the accumulation of black carbon particles in adult human lungs. It is a common occurrence, but the pathophysiologic significance of anthracosis is debatable. Using in situ high mass resolution matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) mass spectrometry imaging analysis, we discovered noxious carbon-bound exogenous compounds, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), tobacco-specific nitrosamines, or aromatic amines, in a series of 330 patients with lung cancer in highly variable and unique patterns. The characteristic nature of carbon-bound exogenous compounds had a strong association wi…

Cancer ResearchLung NeoplasmsNitrosaminesDNA damageCarcinogenesismedicine.disease_causeMass SpectrometryTobacco UseMetabolomeTumor MicroenvironmentMedicineHumansCarcinogenesis; Carcinoma Squamous Cell/chemically induced; Carcinoma Squamous Cell/metabolism; Carcinoma Squamous Cell/pathology; Humans; Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis/chemically induced; Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis/metabolism; Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis/pathology; Lung Neoplasms/chemically induced; Lung Neoplasms/metabolism; Lung Neoplasms/pathology; Mass Spectrometry; Metabolome; Nitrosamines/adverse effects; Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons/adverse effects; Retrospective Studies; Tobacco Use; Tumor MicroenvironmentPolycyclic Aromatic HydrocarbonsLung cancer610 Medicine & healthRetrospective StudiesAnthracosisLungbusiness.industrymedicine.diseasePathophysiologyIdiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosismedicine.anatomical_structureOncologyTumor progressionCancer researchCarcinoma Squamous CellMetabolome570 Life sciences; biologybusinessCarcinogenesis
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Relation of childhood brain tumors to exposure of parents and children to tobacco smoke: The Search international case-control study

2002

The etiology of childhood brain tumors (CBTs) remains unknown. Tobacco smoke contains several known carcinogens and can induce DNA adducts in human placenta and hemoglobin adducts in fetuses. We present the results of an international case-control study to evaluate the association between CBTs and exposure of parents and children to cigarette smoke. The study was undertaken as part of the SEARCH program of the IARC. Nine centers in 7 countries were involved. The studies mainly covered the 1980s and early 1990s. Cases (1,218, ages 0-19 years) were children newly diagnosed with a primary brain tumor; there were 2,223 population-based controls. Most mothers who agreed to participate were inter…

Cancer ResearchPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyPregnancyeducation.field_of_studyPassive smokingbusiness.industryPopulationCase-control studyOdds ratiomedicine.disease_causemedicine.diseaseTobacco smokeOncologyEpidemiologymedicineRisk factorbusinesseducationInternational Journal of Cancer
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Changes in lung-cancer mortality trends in Spain

2001

Several changes in smoking patterns over the past decades in Spain can be expected to result in a shift in lung-cancer mortality rates. We examined time trends in lung-cancer mortality from 1973-1997 using a log-linear Poisson age-period-cohort model. The standardized lung-cancer mortality rate for men almost doubled, from 31.4 per 100,000 in 1973 to 58.6 in 1997, with an average annual increase of 2.7%. Mortality increased for male generations born until 1952 as a consequence of the increasing cigarette smoking in successive birth cohorts. However, the slight downward trend observed for the 2 youngest generations suggests a more favorable outcome of the lung-cancer epidemic among Spanish m…

Cancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryMortality ratePublic healthmedicine.diseaseTobacco smokeSurgeryOncologyCohort effectEpidemiologyCompensation law of mortalityMedicinebusinessLung cancerCohort studyDemographyInternational Journal of Cancer
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Relación entre contacto con el humo del tabaco y caries dental en población de 10 a 15 años de la Comunidad Valenciana

2011

Cartas al directorMaleMedicine(all)Adolescentbusiness.industryGeneral MedicineDental CariesCross-Sectional StudiesHumansMedicineFemaleTobacco Smoke PollutionChildFamily PracticebusinessHumanitiesAtención Primaria
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Cigarette Smoke Extract Induces p38 MAPK-Initiated, Fas-Mediated Eryptosis

2022

Eryptosis is a physiological mechanism for the clearance of senescent or damaged erythrocytes by phagocytes. Excessive eryptosis is stimulated under several pathologies and associated with endothelial injury and thrombosis. Cigarette smoke (CS) is an established risk factor for vascular diseases and cigarette smokers have high-levels of eryptotic erythrocytes. This study, for the first time, investigates the mechanism by which CS damages red blood cells (RBCs). CS extract (CSE) from commercial cigarettes was prepared and standardized for nicotine content. Cytofluorimetric analysis demonstrated that treatment of human RBCs with CSE caused dose-dependent, phosphatidylserine externalization an…

Caspase 8ErythrocytesCaspase 3cigarette smokeOrganic ChemistryGeneral Medicinep38 MAPKCeramidesp38 Mitogen-Activated Protein KinasesCatalysisComputer Science ApplicationsInorganic Chemistryeryptosis; cigarette smoke; death-inducing signaling complex (DISC); p38 MAPK; ceramide; caspasescaspasesSmokeeryptosisSettore BIO/10 - BiochimicaTobaccodeath-inducing signaling complex (DISC)HumansceramidePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryReactive Oxygen SpeciesMolecular BiologySpectroscopy
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