Accumulation of nicotine in human hair during long-term controlled exposure to a low concentration of nicotine vapour

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Abstract

Hair from 5 subjects were exposed in dynamic exposure chambers to air nicotine vapour for 72 hr or 12 months at concentrations of 200 or 5 μg/m3 respectively. Nicotine in the chamber air and human hair was determined by GC/ MS. A linear accumulation of nicotine in hair was found with time for all hairs during the long-term, low concentration exposure, with individual hair nicotine uptake rate constants ranging from 0.70 to 3.75 x 10-3 m3/gxhr. The corresponding hair nicotine uptake rate constants during short-term, high concentration exposure, were significantly higher, ranging from 1.35 to 15.11 x 10-3 m3/gxhr, showing, however, a highly significant linear correlation with the individual long-term exposure rate constants, r2 = 0.9961. It is indicated that long-term hair nicotine uptake rate constants calculated from controlled exposure experiments with pure nicotine vapour are adequate for estimation of individual long-term hair accumulation of nicotine from environmental tobacco smoke even at variable and intermittent exposure. Although higher than the long-term uptake rate constants, the short-term uptake rate constants seem well fitted for a differentiation between different types of hair in their ability to adsorb nicotine also during long-term exposures. The short-term uptake rate constants might also be useful parameters for establishing a reliable cut-off limit in the hair concentration of nicotine between smokers and non-smokers which otherwise seems to be overlapping.

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Nilsen, T., & Nilsen, O. G. (1997). Accumulation of nicotine in human hair during long-term controlled exposure to a low concentration of nicotine vapour. Pharmacology and Toxicology, 81(1), 48–52. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0773.1997.tb00030.x

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