Have a personal or library account? Click to login
The UK Smoke Constituents Testing Study. Summary of Results and Comparison with Other Studies Cover

The UK Smoke Constituents Testing Study. Summary of Results and Comparison with Other Studies

Open Access
|Dec 2014

References

  1. 1. Baker, R.R. and C.J. Proctor: Where there's smoke; Chemistry in Britain 37 (2001) 38–41.
  2. 2. IARC: Evaluation of the carcinogenic risk of chemicals to humans: Tobacco smoking, International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France, 1986, IARC Monograph 38.
  3. 3. Baker, R.R.: Smoke chemistry; in: Tobacco: Production, chemistry and technology, edited by D.L. Davis and M.T. Nielsen, Blackwell Science, Oxford, 1999, Chapter 12.
  4. 4. Green, C.R. and A. Rodgman: The Tobacco Chemists’ Research Conference: A half-century forum for ad-vances in analytical methodology of tobacco and its products; Rec. Avd, Tob. Sci. 22 (1996) 131–304.
  5. 5. Rodgman, A., C.J. Smith, and T.A. Perfetti: The com-position of cigarette smoke: A retrospective, with em-phasis on polycyclic components; Human Exptl. Toxi-col. 19 (2000) 573–595.
  6. 6. Hoffmann, D. and I. Hoffmann: The changing ciga-rette: Chemical studies and bioassays; in: Risks associated with smoking cigarettes with low machine-mea-sured yields of tar and nicotine; edited by DHHS, Smoking and Tobacco Control Monograph 13, NCI, NIH, Bethesda 2001, Chapter 5.
  7. 7. DHSS: Fourth Report of the Independent Scientific Committee on Smoking and Health; HMSO, London, 1988.
  8. 8. Darrall, K., J. Figgins, R. Brown, and G. Phillip: De-termination of benzene and associated volatile com-pounds in mainstream cigarette smoke; Analyst 123 (1998) 1095–1101.
  9. 9. Phillips, G. and R. Waller: Yields of tar and other smoke components from UK cigarettes; Food Chem. Toxicol. 29 (1991) 469–474.
  10. 10. LGC Reports to the Department of Health at www.doh.gov.uk/scoth/research.htm.
  11. 11. Borgerding, M.F., J.A. Bodnar, and D.E. Wingate: The 1999 Massachusetts benchmark study – the final report; Presented to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health 24 July 2000.
  12. 12. Borgerding, M.F., N. Cohen, S.R. Massey, and D.R.E. Thomas, in consultation with M.J. Kaiserman and W.S. Rickert: The 1999 Canadian benchmark study; Pro-vided to Health Canada on 24 May 2000.
  13. 13. Australian cigarette emissions data (2001) www.health.gov.au/pubhlth/strateg/drugs/tobacco/ emis_data.htm.
  14. 14. Tso, T.C., G. Rathkamp G, and D. Hoffmann: Chemical studies on tobacco smoke XXI: Correlation and multiple regression among selected cigarette-smoke constituents and leaf characteristics of bright tobacco; Beitr. Tabakforsch. 7 (1973) 190–194.
  15. 15. Tso, T.C., J.F. Chaplin, J.D. Adams, and D. Hoffmann: Simple correlation and multiple regression among leaf and smoke characteristics of burley tobaccos; Beitr. Tabakforsch. Int. 11(1982) 141–150.
  16. 16. ISO 5725: Accuracy (trueness and precision) of mea-surement methods and results – Part 1: General princi-ples and definitions; International Organisation for Standardisation, Geneva, 1994 (E).
  17. 17. ISO 3402: Tobacco and tobacco products – Atmo-sphere for conditioning and testing; International Or-ganisation for Standardisation, Geneva, 1999.
  18. 18. ISO 3308: Routine analytical smoking machine – Defi-nition and standard conditions; International Organisation for Standardisation, Geneva, 2000.
  19. 19. Purkis, S.W., C.A. Hill, and I.A. Bailey: Current mea-surement reliability of selected smoke analytes; Beitr. Tabakforsch. Int. 20 (2003) 314–324.
  20. 20. Weisberg, S.: Applied linear regression; Wiley, New York, 1985.
  21. 21. Leffingwell, J.C.: Basic chemical constituents of tobacco leaf and differences among tobacco types; in: Tobacco: Production, chemistry and technology, edited by D.L. Davis and M.T. Nielsen, Blackwell Science, Oxford, 1999, Chapter 8.
  22. 22. Norman, A.: Cigarette design and materials; in: Tobacco: Production, chemistry and technology, edited by D.L. Davis and M.T. Nielsen, Blackwell Science, Oxford, 1999, Chapter 11b.
  23. 23. Baker, R. and R. Crellin: The diffusion of carbon mon-oxide out of cigarettes; Beitr. Tabakforsch. Int. 9 (1977) 131–140.
  24. 24. Hoffmann, D. and E. Wynder: Filtration of phenols from tobacco smoke; J. Natl. Cancer Inst. 30 (1963) 67–84.
  25. 25. Draper, N.R. and H. Smith: Applied regression analy-sis; Wiley, New York, 1966.
  26. 26. ISO 8243: Sampling tobacco and tobacco products part 3. Method of sampling cigarettes; International Or-ganisation for Standardisation, Geneva, 1991.
  27. 27. Horwitz, W., L.R. Kamps, and K.W. Boyer: Quality assurance in the analysis of food and trace constituents; J. Assoc. Off. Anal. Chem 63 (1980) 1344–1354.
  28. 28. Rickert, W.S. and W.G. Wright: Stability of yields of Canadian mandated analytes from the Kentucky refer-ence cigarette; CORESTA Conference 2002, paper ST26, available at www.coresta.org.
  29. 29. Hahn, J. and W.-D. Heller: Determination of carbon monoxide in cigarette smoke. Problems in evaluating results; Deutsche Lebensmittel Rundschau 98 (2002) 165–169.
  30. 30. Task Force on smoking methods development, www.coresta.org and follow links to special analytes task force.
  31. 31. Data on Canadian cigarettes’ smoke constituents yields, www.healthplanning.gov.bc.ca/ttdr/index.html
Language: English
Page range: 117 - 138
Submitted on: Nov 30, 2003
|
Accepted on: Apr 13, 2004
|
Published on: Dec 30, 2014
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2014 E Gregg, C Hill, M Hollywood, M Kearney, D McLaughlin, K McAdam, M Williams, S Purkis, published by Institut für Tabakforschung GmbH
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.