Last data update: Dec 09, 2024. (Total: 48320 publications since 2009)
Records 1-7 (of 7 Records) |
Query Trace: Fresquez MR[original query] |
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Characterizing the transport of aluminum-, silicon- and titanium-containing particles and nanoparticles in mainstream tobacco smoke
Fresquez MR , Watson CH , Valentin-Blasini L , Steven Pappas R . J Anal Toxicol 2021 45 (7) 722-729 The most commonly observed forms of aluminum, silicon and titanium in tobacco products are aluminum silicates (e.g., kaolin), silica and titanium(IV) oxide. These compounds are neither water soluble nor volatile at cigarette combustion temperatures. Rather, they are transported in mainstream tobacco smoke as particles after being freed by combustion from the tobacco filler and can induce pulmonary inflammation when inhaled. Aluminum silicate particles are the most frequently observed particles in the pulmonary macrophages of smokers and have become known as 'smokers' inclusions'. A relatively new technique, single particle triple quadrupole inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry was used to analyze aluminum-, silicon- and titanium-containing particle deliveries in cigarette and little cigar mainstream tobacco smoke, and to collect information on solid inorganic particles. The mass concentration of aluminum-containing particles transmitted in mainstream smoke was low (0.89-0.56 ng/cigarette), which was not surprising because aluminum silicates are not volatile. Although the collective masses (ng/cigarette) of aluminum-, silicon- and titanium-containing particles under 100 nm diameter transported in mainstream smoke were low, an abundance of 'ultrafine' particles (particles < 100 nm or nanoparticles) was observed. Limitations of the particle background equivalent diameter (the smallest detectable particle size (MassHunter 4.5 Software) due to the environmentally ubiquitous silicon background restricted the determination of silica nanoparticles, but silica particles slightly below 200 nm diameter were consistently detected. Aluminum- and titanium-containing nanoparticles were observed in all cigarette and little cigar samples, with titanium(IV) oxide particle deliveries consistently fewer in number and smaller in diameter than the other two types of particles. The highest concentrations of aluminum-containing particles (as kaolin) were in the nanoparticle range with much lower concentrations extending to the larger particle sizes (>100 nm). The number and range of particle sizes determined in mainstream smoke is consistent with pulmonary deposition of aluminum silicates described by other researchers as contributing to the 'smokers' inclusions' observed in pulmonary macrophages. |
Electrothermal vaporization-QQQ-ICP-MS for determination of chromium in mainstream cigarette smoke particulate
Fresquez MR , Gonzalez-Jimenez N , Gray N , Valentin-Blasini L , Watson CH , Pappas RS . J Anal Toxicol 2017 41 (4) 1-6 Chromium is transported in mainstream tobacco smoke at very low concentrations. However, when chromium is deposited too deeply in the lungs for mucociliary clearance, or is in a particle that is too large to pass directly through tissues, it bioaccumulates in the lungs of smokers. It is important to determine the concentrations of chromium that are transported in mainstream smoke. Several reliable studies have resulted in reports of chromium concentrations in smoke particulate that were below limits of detection (LODs) for the instruments and methods employed. In this study, electrothermal vaporization-triple quad-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ETV-QQQ-ICP-MS) was chosen for determination of chromium concentrations in mainstream smoke because of the high sensitivity of ETV combined with QQQ-ICP-MS. The smoke from five reference, quality control, and commercial cigarettes was analyzed using ETV-QQQ-ICP-MS with isotope dilution for quantitative determination of chromium. The method LOD was sufficiently low that chromium concentrations in mainstream smoke could indeed be determined. The chromium concentrations in the smoke particulate were between 0.60 and 1.03 ng/cigarette. The range of chromium concentrations was at or below previously reported LODs. Determination of the oxidation state of the chromium transported in mainstream smoke would also be important, in consideration of the fact that both chromium(III) and chromium(VI) oxidation states cause inhalation toxicity, but chromium(VI) is also a carcinogen. It was possible to separate the oxidation states using ETV-QQQ-ICP-MS. However, determination of individual species at the levels found in mainstream smoke particulate matter was not possible with the present method. |
High-throughput determination of mercury in tobacco and mainstream smoke from little cigars
Fresquez MR , Gonzalez-Jimenez N , Gray N , Watson CH , Pappas RS . J Anal Toxicol 2015 39 (7) 545-50 A method was developed that utilizes a platinum trap for mercury from mainstream tobacco smoke, which represents an improvement over traditional approaches that require impingers and long sample preparation procedures. In this approach, the trapped mercury is directly released for analysis by heating the trap in a direct mercury analyzer. The method was applied to the analysis of mercury in the mainstream smoke of little cigars. The mercury levels in little cigar smoke obtained under Health Canada Intense smoking machine conditions ranged from 7.1 x 10-3 to 1.2 x 10-2 mg/m3. These air mercury levels exceed the chronic inhalation minimal risk level corrected for intermittent exposure to metallic mercury (e.g., 1 or 2 h per day, 5 days per week) determined by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. Multivariate statistical analysis was used to assess associations between mercury levels and little cigar physical design properties. Filter ventilation was identified as the principal physical parameter influencing mercury concentrations in mainstream little cigar smoke generated under ISO machine smoking conditions. With filter ventilation blocked under Health Canada Intense smoking conditions, mercury concentrations in tobacco and puff number (smoke volume) were the primary physical parameters that influenced mainstream smoke mercury concentrations. |
Determination of toxic metals in little cigar tobacco with 'triple quad' ICP-MS
Pappas RS , Martone N , Gonzalez-Jimenez N , Fresquez MR , Watson CH . J Anal Toxicol 2015 39 (5) 347-52 Smoking remains the leading cause of preventable death in the USA. Much of the focus on harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHCs) in tobacco products has been on cigarettes. Little cigars gained popularity over the last decade until tobacco taxes made cigarettes more expensive in the USA. Many little cigar brands are similar in size with cigarettes and may be smoked in a similar manner. Scant data are available on HPHC concentrations in little cigars, therefore we developed and applied a new analytical method to determine concentrations of 10 toxic metals in little cigar tobacco. The method utilizes 'triple quadrupole' ICP-MS. By optimizing octapole bias, energy discrimination and cell gas flow settings, we were able to accurately quantify a range of elements including those for which the cell gas reactions were endothermic. All standard modes (Single Quad No Gas, MS-MS NH3/He and MS-MS O2) were utilized for the quantitation of 10 toxic metals in little cigar tobacco, including uranium, which was added as an analyte in the new method. Because of the elimination of interfering ions at 'shifted analyte masses', detection limits were lower compared with a previous method. Tobacco selenium concentrations were below the limit of detection in the previous method, but the new technology made it possible to report all selenium concentrations. |
Cigarette smoke cadmium breakthrough from traditional filters: implications for exposure
Pappas RS , Fresquez MR , Watson CH . J Anal Toxicol 2014 39 (1) 45-51 Cadmium, a carcinogenic metal, is highly toxic to renal, skeletal, nervous, respiratory and cardiovascular systems. Accurate and precise quantification of mainstream smoke cadmium levels in cigarette smoke is important because of exposure concerns. The two most common trapping techniques for collecting mainstream tobacco smoke particulate for analysis are glass fiber filters and electrostatic precipitators. We observed that a significant portion of total cadmium passed through standard glass fiber filters that are used to trap particulate matter. We therefore developed platinum traps to collect the cadmium that passed through the filters and tested a variety of cigarettes with different physical parameters for quantities of cadmium that passed though the filters. We found <1% cadmium passed through electrostatic precipitators. In contrast, cadmium that passed through 92 mm glass fiber filters on a rotary smoking machine was significantly higher, ranging from 3.5 to 22.9% of total smoke cadmium deliveries. Cadmium passed through 44 mm filters typically used on linear smoking machines to an even greater degree, ranging from 13.6 to 30.4% of the total smoke cadmium deliveries. Differences in the cadmium that passed through from the glass fiber filters and electrostatic precipitator could be explained in part if cadmium resides in the smaller mainstream smoke aerosol particle sizes. Differences in particle size distribution could have toxicological implications and could help explain the pulmonary and cardiovascular cadmium uptake in smokers. |
Measurement of mercury species in human blood using triple spike isotope dilution with SPME-GC-ICP-DRC-MS
Sommer YL , Verdon CP , Fresquez MR , Ward CD , Wood EB , Pan Y , Caldwell KL , Jones RL . Anal Bioanal Chem 2014 406 (20) 5039-47 The measurement of different mercury compounds in human blood can provide valuable information about the type of mercury exposure. To this end, our laboratory developed a biomonitoring method for the quantification of inorganic (iHg), methyl (MeHg), and ethyl (EtHg) mercury in whole blood using a triple-spike isotope dilution (TSID) quantification method employing capillary gas chromatography (GC) and inductively coupled dynamic reaction cell mass spectrometry (ICP-DRC-MS). We used a robotic CombiPAL(R) sample handling station featuring twin fiber-based solid-phase microextraction (SPME) injector heads. The use of two SPME fibers significantly reduces sample analysis cycle times making this method very suitable for high sample throughput, which is a requirement for large public health biomonitoring studies. Our sample preparation procedure involved solubilization of blood samples with tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH) followed by the derivatization with sodium tetra(n-propyl)borate (NaBPr4) to promote volatility of mercury species. We thoroughly investigated mercury species stability in the blood matrix during the course of sample treatment and analysis. The method accuracy for quantifying iHg, MeHg, and EtHg was validated using NIST standard reference materials (SRM 955c level 3) and the Centre de Toxicologie du Quebec (CTQ) proficiency testing (PT) samples. The limit of detection (LOD) for iHg, MeHg, and EtHg in human blood was determined to be 0.27, 0.12, and 0.16 mug/L, respectively. |
Toxic metal concentrations in mainstream smoke from cigarettes available in the USA
Pappas RS , Fresquez MR , Martone N , Watson CH . J Anal Toxicol 2014 38 (4) 204-11 Public health officials and leaders of 168 nations have signaled their concern regarding the health and economic impacts of smoking by becoming signatory parties to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC). One of FCTC's purposes is to help achieve meaningful regulation for tobacco products in order to decrease the exposure to harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHCs) delivered to users and those who are exposed to secondhand smoke. Determining baseline delivery ranges for HPHCs in modern commercial tobacco products is crucial information regulators could use to make informed decisions. Establishing mainstream smoke delivery concentration ranges for toxic metals was conducted through analyses of total particulate matter (TPM) collected with smoking machines using standard smoking regimens. We developed a rapid analytical method with microwave digestion of TPM samples obtained with smoking machines using electrostatic precipitation under the ISO and Intense smoking regimens. Digested samples are analyzed for chromium, manganese, cobalt, nickel, arsenic, cadmium and lead using inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. This method provides data obtained using the ISO smoking regimen for comparability with previous studies as well as an Intense smoking regimen that represents deliveries that fall within the range of human exposure levels to toxic metals. |
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