AI Article Synopsis

  • Hookah smoking, often seen as a safer alternative to cigarettes, actually delivers tobacco toxins and harmful charcoal combustion products that can impair blood vessel function.
  • A study involving young adult hookah smokers measured changes in nicotine levels, exhaled carbon monoxide (CO), and artery dilation before and after smoking with both charcoal and electric heat sources.
  • Results showed that while nicotine levels rose similarly across all methods, smoking charcoal-heated hookah significantly increased CO levels and improved artery dilation, unlike electrically heated hookah and cigarette smoking, which both reduced artery function.

Article Abstract

Background: Hookah smoking is marketed to youth as a harmless alternative to cigarettes. Although cigarette smoking acutely impairs endothelial function, the effect of smoking fruit-flavored hookah tobacco is unknown. Because charcoal traditionally is used to heat the hookah tobacco in the waterpipe, hookah smoke delivers tobacco toxicants and nicotine plus charcoal combustion products: not only carbon-rich nanoparticles, oxidants that may destroy nitric oxide and impair endothelial function, but also large amounts of carbon monoxide (CO), a putative vasodilator molecule.

Methods: To test the acute effect of hookah smoking on endothelial function, in young adult hookah smokers (n=30, age 26±1 years, mean±SE), we measured plasma nicotine, exhaled CO, and brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD) before and after charcoal-heated hookah smoking. To remove the effect of charcoal combustion, the same measurements were performed when the same flavored hookah tobacco product was heated electrically (n=20). As a positive internal control, we studied age-matched cigarette smokers (n=15) who smoked 1 cigarette. To isolate the effect of the CO boost on FMD, hookah smokers (n=8) inhaled a 0.1% CO gas mixture to approximate their CO boost achieved with charcoal-heated hookah smoking.

Results: Nicotine levels increased similarly with all types of smoking, whereas exhaled CO increased 9- to 10-fold more after charcoal-heated hookah than after either electrically heated hookah or cigarette smoking. FMD did not decrease after smoking charcoal-heated hookah but instead increased by +43±7% ( P<0.001). In contrast, FMD decreased by -27±4% ( P<0.001) after smoking electrically heated hookah, comparable to the decrease after cigarette smoking. FMD increased markedly by 138±71% ( P<0.001) after breathing CO gas, 2.8 times more than the increase induced in the same subjects after smoking charcoal-heated hookah ( P<0.001), despite comparable increases in exhaled CO (24±1 versus 28±3 ppm, hookah versus CO).

Conclusions: Smoking hookah tobacco, similar to cigarette tobacco, acutely impairs endothelial function. With traditional charcoal-heated hookah smoking, the acute endothelial dysfunction is masked by high levels of carbon monoxide, a potent vasodilator molecule generated by charcoal combustion. With respect to large-artery endothelial function, smoking hookah is not harmless.

Clinical Trial Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifiers: NCT03616002 and NCT03067701.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.118.037375DOI Listing

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