Does relighting a cigarette have a harsher effect on your health?
From the Cancer Institute of New Jersey:
According to Michael Steinberg, MD, MPH, FACP, a member of The Cancer Institute of New Jersey and director of the Tobacco Dependence Program, who is the senior author of the research:
“In fact, smokers who relight cigarettes may be at higher risk of lung cancer and chronic bronchitis. That is something of which policy makers need to be aware,” he notes.
From Oxford Academic:
Given that previous research has indicated that relighting cigarettes leads to increased harm, the public health implications of this smoking practice are discussed.
Sadly, I do not have permission to access the Oxford article.
From a seemingly unofficial source on Quora:
When you relight a cigarette, you're breathing coal. Read about breathing coal & black lungs. If you're going to relight a cigarette it is desirable to sever the burnt end of the cigarette to remove the burnt coal. The relighting of the burnt coal causes marginally higher incidence of lung cancer compared with people who use a "cigarette snipper" (or just small scissors).
From another Quora post:
There are some simple physical truths here.
The last few drags of a cigarette contain far more tar, as the tar from the first half has partially condensed and saturated the butt.
There are also a lot of other toxic chemicals that do the same thing.
Also, most of the horrible stuff in cigs is worse once it becomes oxidized (burnt.)
Although most online sources suggest, "Yes, relighting cigarettes is worse for your health", the official sources don't explain how.
The unofficial sources do conjure some possibilities, I would prefer documentation that's a bit more official.
Question
What is the set of health concerns to consider when relighting a cigarette, compared to smoking a full never-been-lit-before cigarette? I'd assume the set would contain all the concerns of smoking in general, but what deviations exist?
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This appears to be from a very old study
The rate of chronic bronchitis among relighters (39·7%) was higher than the rate (32·9%) among the remaining cigarette smokers. The difference was of high statistical significance (P<0·001), and the same pattern was maintained when age and consumption were standardized. After allowing for a trend towards lower social class and a preference for plain as opposed to filter cigarettes the rate of chronic bronchitis among relighters was about 15% greater than that of the remaining cigarette smokers.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1610789/
And there doesn't appear to be any subsequent study that replicates the findings rendering the findings preliminary.
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