Cigarette smoke contains 69 chemicals that are known to cause
cancer. Find out more about these chemicals and what they do on
this page.
Click on the links below to find out
more about these cancer-causing chemicals.
Tar is a term that describes a collection of solid particles
that smokers inhale when they light a cigarette. It is a mixture of
lots of chemicals, many of which can cause cancer. When it settles,
tar forms a sticky, brown residue that can stain smokers’ teeth,
fingers and lungs.
Because tar is listed on packs, it is easy to believe that it is
the only harmful part of cigarettes. But some of the most dangerous
chemicals in tobacco smoke are present as gases, and do not count
as part of tar. This means that
cigarettes with less tar still contain all the other toxic
chemicals.
Arsenic is one of the most dangerous chemicals in cigarettes. It
can cause cancer as well as damaging the heart and its blood
vessels.
Small amounts of arsenic can accumulate in smokers’ bodies and
build up to higher concentrations over months and years. As well as
any direct effects, it can worsen the effect of other chemicals by
interfering with our ability to
repair our DNA.
Fish and seafood can be major sources of arsenic, but in a form
that is less toxic and more readily removed from the body. In
contrast, tobacco smoke contains arsenic in a more dangerous
form.
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Benzene is a solvent used to manufacture other chemicals,
including petrol. It is well-established that benzene can cause
cancer, particularly
leukaemia. It could account for between a tenth and a half of
the deaths from leukaemia caused by smoking.
Tobacco smoke contains large amounts of benzene and accounts for
a big proportion of our exposure to this poison. The average smoker
inhales about ten times more benzene than the average
non-smoker.
And some studies have estimated that the amount of benzene that
a person inhales through second-hand smoke over their lifetime
could increase their risk of cancer.
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Cadmium is a metal used mostly to make batteries. The majority
of cadmium in our bodies comes from exposure to tobacco smoke.
Smokers can have twice as much cadmium in their blood as
non-smokers.
Studies have found that the amounts of cadmium present in
tobacco smoke are capable of affecting our health. It is a known
cause of cancer, and can also damage the kidneys and the linings of
the arteries.
Our bodies have proteins that mop up harmful chemicals like
cadmium, but the amounts in smoke can overload these proteins.
Cadmium can also prevent our cells from repairing
damaged DNA. Because of this, it can make the effects of other
chemicals even worse.
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Formaldehyde is a smelly chemical used to kill bacteria,
preserve dead bodies and manufacture other chemicals. It is one of
the substances in tobacco smoke most likely to cause diseases in
our lungs and airways.
Formaldehyde is also a known cause of cancer. It is believed
that even the small amounts in
second-hand smoke could increase our lifetime risk of
cancer.
Tobacco smoke is one of our major sources of formaldehyde
exposure. Places where people smoke can have three times the normal
levels of this poison.
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Polonium is a rare, radioactive element and polonium-210 is its
most common form. Polonium strongly emits a very damaging type of
radiation called alpha-radiation that can usually be blocked by
thin layers of skin.
But tobacco smoke contains traces of polonium, which become
deposited inside their airways and deliver radiation directly to
surrounding cells.
The lungs of smokers can be exposed to four times more polonium
than those of non-smokers and specific parts may get a hundred
times more radiation. One study estimated that someone smoking one
and half packs a day receives the equivalent amount of radiation as
someone having 300 chest X-rays a year.
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Chromium is a metal used to make metallic alloys, dyes and
paints and comes in different types. Chromium III or ‘trivalent
chromium’ is most commonly used. It is available as dietary
supplements and is harmless.
On the other hand, chromium VI or ‘hexavalent chromium’ is very
toxic, is found in tobacco smoke, and is known to cause lung
cancer. It allows other cancer-causing chemicals (such as
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) to stick more strongly to DNA and
damage it.
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1,3-butadiene or BDE is an industrial chemical used in rubber
manufacture. Some scientists believe that of all the chemicals in
tobacco smoke, BDE may present the greatest overall cancer risk. It
may not be as good at causing cancer as some of the other chemicals
listed here, but it is found in large amounts in tobacco smoke.
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Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons or PAHs are a group of powerful
cancer-causing chemicals that can
damage DNA and set cells down the road to becoming tumours.
One of these chemicals – benzo(a)pyrene or BAP – is one of the
most widely studied of all tobacco poisons. BAP directly damages
p53, a gene that normally protects our bodies against cancer.
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Nitrosamines are a group of chemicals that can directly
damage DNA, like
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).
They are found in small amounts in food. But tobacco products,
including those that are chewed rather than smoked, are by far our
largest source of exposure to these chemicals. Even though they are
found in relatively small amounts in cigarettes, they are very
strong cancer-causing chemicals.
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Acrolein is a gas with an intensely irritating smell and is one
of the most abundant chemicals in cigarette smoke. It belongs to
the same group of chemicals as
formaldehyde and acetaldehyde, both of which can cause
cancer.
Until now, it wasn’t clear if acrolein causes cancer as well,
but recent experiments suggest that it can. We now know that
acrolein can cause DNA damage that is similar to the damage seen in
lung cancer patients. Since smoke contains up to 1,000 times more
acrolein than other DNA-damaging chemicals, it could be a major
cause of lung cancer.
Acrolein also stops our cells from repairing DNA damage, like
arsenic and
cadmium. And like
hydrogen cyanide, it kills the hairs that normally clean our
lungs of other toxins.
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Some of the other cancer-causing ingredients of tobacco smoke
include:
- metals, such as nickel, lead,
cobalt and beryllium. While you
may be exposed to some of these metals through domestic items or
food, inhaling them in tobacco smoke is worse, because they are
easily absorbed by the lungs.
-
acetaldehyde, which is also formed in your
tissues when you drink alcohol – it is responsible for many nasty
hangover symptoms
-
hydrazine, a very toxic chemical used mainly
in rocket fuel
Posted February 25, 2008 | 12:42 PM (EST)