Abstract
Ten-year mortality rates for lung cancer and coronary heart disease have been related to cigarette smoking habits in 17,475 males civil servants aged 40-64 and in a sample of 8089 male British residents aged 35-69. Both diseases were more frequent in smokers. Lung cancer rates were higher overall for 'non-inhalers', particularly in heavy smokers. Tar yield correlated with the risk of lung cancer in non-inhalers but less so in inhalers. Conversely, coronary deaths were more common among inhalers, and the effect of tar/nicotine yield (such as it was) was confined to inhalers. It appears that there are subtle interactions between the amount smoked, the tar/nicotine yield of the cigarette, and the style of smoking. Thus the effects of a change in cigarette characteristics are hard to predict, and they may be different for respiratory and cardiovascular disease.
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CITATION STYLE
Higenbottam, T., Shipley, M. J., & Rose, G. (1982). Cigarettes, lung cancer, and coronary heart disease: The effects of inhalation and tar yield. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 36(2), 113–117. https://doi.org/10.1136/jech.36.2.113
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