Philip Morris
Sidestream Cigarette Smoke and Arteriosclerosis
Fields
- Author
- Mengersen, K.
- Merrilees, M.J.
- Penn, A.
- Synder, C.A.
- Merrilees, M.J.
- Document File
- 2057837078/2057837447/Cal Epa Appendix III
- Area
- MCALPIN,LOREEN/OFFICE
- Type
- PUBL, PUBLICATION, OTHER
- BIBL, BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Master ID
- 2057837080/7446
Related Documents:- 2057837085 Increased Experimental Atherosclerosis in Cholesterol-Fed Rabbits Exposed to Passive Smoke: Taking Issue with Study Design and Methods of Analysis
- 2057837087-7093 Testimony in Response to OSHA's Identification of Cardiovascular Disease As A Hazard Resulting From Exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Workplace
- 2057837107-7108 Comments on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Issued by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration Addressing Indoor Air Quality in Indoor Work Environments
- 2057837109-7152 A Critical Examination of the OSHA Ets Risk Assessment
- 2057837153-7182 An Alternative Explanation for the Apparent Elevated Relative Mortality and Morbidity Risks of Spouses and Other Family Members of Smokers Associated with Exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- 2057837186-7207 Curriculum Vitae Theodor D.Sterling
- 2057837218-7262 Cardiovascular Effects of Ets Exposure: Comments on Biological Plausibility of Proposed Mechanisms
- 2057837264-7278 Environmental Tobacco Smoke and Coronary Heart Syndromes: Absence of An Association
- 2057837281-7372 OSHA Posthearing Submission
- 2057837374-7377 Ischemic Heart Disease and Spousal Smoking in the National Mortality Followback Survey
- 2057837379-7386 Publication Bias in the Environmental Tobacco Smoke / Coronary Heart Disease Epidemiologic Literature
- 2057837419-7445 Biological Mechanisms Accounting for the Purported Relationship Between Environmental Tobacco Smoke Exposure and Adverse Cardiovascular Effects: A Response to Dr. Glantz
- Characteristic
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Named Person
- Coggins, Cre
- Glantz, S.A.
- Mengersen, K.
- Merrilees, M.J.
- Parmley, W.W.
- Penn, A.
- Synder, C.A.
- Wells
- Glantz, S.A.
- Litigation
- Ppla/Produced
- Author (Organization)
- Anthony J Lanza Research Lab
- Dept of Anatomy
- Dept of Statistics
- Nelson Inst of Environmental Medicine
- Nyu Medical Center
- Queensland Univ of Technology
- Univ of Auckland
- Dept of Anatomy
- Site
- R635
- Date Loaded
- 27 Jan 2000
- UCSF Legacy ID
- dyl42d00
Document Images
3022
C; vt"\ a
Letters to the Editor will be published. if suitable, as space permits. Thev should not exceed 1000
words
.
(t}ped double-spaced) in length and mav be.subject to editing or abridgment.
:lnxietY and Risk of Coronary Heart Disease , cwdme the level of exposure for not being relevant to
levels
To r1)e Ediror: --~ encountered by passive smokers, Coggins claimed that the total
Kawychi et'a0 report that anxiety may increase the risk of fatall suspended particulates (TSP) was
some 300 times higher than
coronar4 heart disease through h;perven[tlation during an acure., would be encountered in a smoking
home. Penn and Snyder
attack. wlaich could in turn induce coronary spasm, or an acute coun[ered by arguing that if the
higher published concentran6ns
attack of a'ni.ietv, [ripgonng an episode of fatal ventricular arrhyth- for TSP are used. then the
TSP concentration in their study is only
mia. The ne'probiology is suggested by studies linking brairtstem ?0 times that reported for public
places.
cardiovasculak control. cardiovascular reactivity in challenging Clearly, whatever value is taken.
the cockerels were exposed to
tasks, and the\induction of breathin¢ panic, and vasospasm to levels that passive smokers would not
normally encounter. Srre-
dopamine iater ized to the right hemisphere =% This hypotHesis is spective of the level of
exposure. however, we would submit that
supported by an norrnal parahippocampal region and its afferent there are more important questions
that need to be answered
and efferent connections in patients vulnerable to lactate-induced before the findings of Penn and
Snyder are accepted as evidence of
panic.' It is also supported by optimal response organiuationat a duect effect of environmental
tobacco smoke (ETS) on the
intermediate dopamike tone in a medsal-frontal-strratal activation development of plaques.
system' and by a ene(aal role for the medial-frontal cortex in ' The important finding by the
,.athors was that cockerels (from 66
emotional experience aitiJd expression and in oomple[e sympathetic to 22 weeks of age) exposed to
sidestream smoke for 6 hours per
activation of cardiovascular responses to both severely and mildly day, 5 days per week, showed
significantly enhanced growth of
stressful stimuli` These t~tsdings suggest that subclmical impair- aortic plaques. They also
found, however, that neither the number
ment of lung airways in patients with panic disorder might be due nor distribution of plaques was
affected by the exposure. The main
to the dysregulation of airw)qy smooth muscle tone by dopamine ' conciusion is thus very dependent
on acceptance of the validity of
abnormalttiesN They also poit to the existence of deep and lawful the method of measuring plaque
growth. -fhe crucial point here is
mental structures governing co nitive and emotional functioning, that plaque areas of the exposed
and unexposed groups were not
reflecting properties of neuronaactivtty.and firing."-it -compared direcdy,. Rather, they were first
standardized by dividing
., `'bl , 3ozZ-7o'a-3,\4 S1^
Correspondence
plaque area by luminal circumference to produce a plaque index.
Ernest H. Friedman, MD All of the data on plaque development and the statistical analyses
DepanmXnts oj ,Nedicine and Prychiany relate to the indices, not to raw data. A plaque index based
on
se Western Reserve Gnrversrtv erc mference however ma not reflect absolute changes unless
u y
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Clevefand, Ohio -. further standardizations are made.
For example, it plaque areas were the same for the two groups
L Kawachi 4 Sparrow D, Vokonas PS, issSt Symptoms of apxiety
and risk of coronary heart disease: [ Norrnative Aging Study. but the vessels of the exposetl group
were slightly smaller. then the
Circufarion. 1994:90:?]?5-2129. net effect would be an increase in the plaque index. implying
1 Friedman EH, Owens JF, Matthews - Stoney CM, Berga SL
inereaseddevelopmen[whennosuchinereaeeoccurted-Ofcourse,
4lenopause and blood pressure. Circrilari . 1994;89:294Z hetter. in such a case, plaques in the
smaller vessels would be relatively
i. Pitchot W. Ansseau M, Moreno AG. Han nne M. von Frenckell laraer.'Plaaue area-however- may be a
function of age (the same in
R. Dopaminergie funetion in panic'diso ec comparlson with bothgrou s)andinde endent
withinlimits)ofvesselsize.Nodata
major and minor depressioa 8io( Pnrhiurn. l99?:32:1004-101 L p p f 4. Reiman EM, Raichle ME-
Robins E, Butler F Herscovitch P Fox are provided on the sizes of vessels or, as a surrogate, the
weights
P, Perlmuner S. The application oPpoiitiov e ission tomography of the cockerels in the exposed and
unexposed groups. Did the
to the study of panic aisorder. Am I Prvchrany. 198fi:143:469-477. exposed group grow at the same
rate as the unexposed group over
5. Frysz[ak RJ, Neafsey EJ. The effect ofroedial fr tal cortex lesions the 4-month period? , -
on cardiovascular conditioned emotional respons in the rat. Brain If. nn the other hand, the
vessels, or eauivalent aortic se¢ments
Res. 1994:643:181-193, in Penn and Sn der's stu
b. Pema G. Marconi C, Battaglia M, Bertani A. Panz Bellodi Y.s dy, weree all fairly similar in s12e,
would it
la
ue
nall
the raw data on
t additi
b
tt
t
h
b
q
p
y
ave
een
e
er
o presen
o
L. Subolinical impairment of lung auways in patie ts wi[h panic not
disorder. Biol Prychtany. t994:36:606605. area? That would have done two things. It would have
allowed the
', Friedman EH. Bowel dysfunction in young women--OuL 1994; reader to gain an appreciation both of
the absolute change in
35:57?. Letter. . plaque size and of the variability between segments and between
8. Tanji J. Shima K- Role for supplementary motor ar cells in animals.
planning several movements ahead. Namre. t9941371:4f l6.
is crucial to achieving a
lin
e
ade
uate sam
i
- I
g
,
q
p
n our exper
enc
9, Urena 3, Femandez-Chacon R. Benot AR, Alvarez de T edo G.
t-opez-Bameo 7 Hypoxia induces voltage-dependent CAenery representative view of the tme state of
plaque stze and distribution.
and quantal dopamine secretion in carotid body glomuscell Pra In this respect, it is not clear why
Penn and Snyder sampied 30
Varl Acad Sci USA. I994:91:I0208-10211. .. \ animals idthe exposed group but only 12 in the
unexposed group.
t0. Friedman EH. Karasawa Y. Neurobiology of passive avoid:_M\ce This bias-was exacerbated in the
sampling of plaques in each
impairment after ischemia. Stroke. 199425:15?6. !-etrer. segment, where, for the con[rols. 3 to 10
samples were taken (for a
11. Friedman EH. Neurobiology of cigarette smoking in peptic ulce(. total of 50), and for the
smoke-exposed animals. 6 to 24 samples
diseazeJ C1in GastroenteroL 7494:I8:89-90. Le[ten .
- --- were taken (for a total of t53) Although different sample sizes are
.~.
- - - generally acceptable if certain conditions ar< met or particuiarN
Sidestream. Cigarette Smoke and Arteriosclerosis future investigations are envisaged, in this case
there may be cause~.,/
To the Editor. . .. .. , for concem because of the skewed distribution of plaque s¢e. Am
Coggins' criticized the study by Penn andSnyder' (Inhalation pf few large plaques could strongly
influence the mean value, andc4
sidestteam smoke accelerates development of arteriosclerotic - undersampling may result in the mean
and median values beingGo
plaques. Clrculanon. 1993:88:18?0-1825.) on several grounds.. in- . closer together. In Fig 2 of the
article by Penn and Snyder. thecA)
. . . .. _. . . . . .... . ~~
w
a. ~3

Correspondence
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
differences between the mean and median values for the control values were still smaller than rhe
crorrespondine means tor all eight
group(n=12) arenoticeablysmatlerthanfortheexposedgroup
se[sofplaquesegments.(Fortwoo[hersetsofseemen[s.eachwith
(n=301. Moreover, in the exposed group- the two large means for only two plaque samples. no
meammedian ratio was determined.l
segments'_ and 10 may have high leverane in the analysis and hence In the smoke-exposed eroup. the
means also exceeded the medians.
<ubstannalh influence the conclusions. These mac also be infiu- this time in eight of ninese[s..
The tenth set had only tuo samples.
enced by missing.values such as the medians forsegmenr 10 of the In addition, on a segmenrbv-segment
basis- mean cross-sectional
exposed group and of segments 8 and 9 of the unexposed group. area measurements were still larger
for smoke-exposed cockerels
to a combination . than for air controls in every case-
oP dtm t p I ne ~b sss and d ffer nce; tnmeslsel g s b ize'. With the published The suegetion that
we present all the raw data is unrealistic. We
informatton. this is not possible to ascertain. Since there are could have provided summary
statistics for each animal and each
apparently only a total of 203 plaque mdes dara points. n.wouidbe segment. as the writers suggest.
Ho.e.er. we decided that our
helpful to see the individual area and circumfererce value or at manner of presentation was clear
and direct. Apparently, the
least summare statisncs for each animal and for each segment. reviewers agreed.
The issue of enhanced plaque ¢rowth is,importanrs since there is The number of animals chosen for
the experiment was based on
tncreasine debate over the effects.of ETS on health. In Glantz and results from many previous
experiments tie. on esperience). For
Parmley's review' of the effects of passive smoktn¢ qn hean our subsequent `sidestream smoke from
one cigare[te' study
disease, the epidemtoloetcal and btologtcal data are used to (Circularron. 1994:90:1363-1367.1. a
power study was carried out
reinforce each other to reach the conclusion that. based on the based on oui'-five-ciearette studc'
to help_ us determine the combined weight of eeidenoe. ETS causes heart disease. The - approprfate
numbers of animals to test. Regarding sampling bias,
eptdemiological evidence. however, is not strong. and the small Drs Merrileesand Mengersen are
incorrect to say "... for the
increase in relative risk (1.3) has been challenged' as not beingfree controls. 3 to 10 samples were
taken ....'- We `took" all samples.
of bias and confounders. Demonstration of a direct effect on lesion Every measurement was made
double-blind. There were actually
growth is thus potentially very important for resohtng whether or . three sets of codes that had to
be broken before any of the
not E7S is a causative a¢ent. It is therefore particularly important calculated plaque index values
were assigned to control or treated
that data supporting a direct effect are scrutiniied carefully and groups. There were 2.5 times as
many cockerels in one group as in
analvzed correctly and all alternative ihteroretations ruled out. It is the other and there were 25
times as many total plaque-containing
for this reasoh that while the quesnonsraised in this letter may . segments in one group as in the
uther. There is no evidence of
seem trivial. they are of central impoitance to the conclusions of sampling bias.
the studv in question and the issue in getierai. The last paragraph of the letter raises some
important points
' - with which we concur but omits reference to iwo recent. relevant
Mervyn J. Merrilees, PhD publications. One by Wells (.1 Am Cofl Cardiol. 199424:546-554.)
Department of Anatomy discusses epidemiological evidence relating ETS exposures to heart
p'nirersirvofAuckland disease dea[hs. Wells's calculations show that every year in the
Auckland, New Zealand United States, over 80 000 excess deaths from heart disease occur
Kerrie Mengersen, PhD as a direct result of earlier exposures to ETS. The secomf study was
Department of Srarisrics our own'sidestream smoke from onecigarette" study noted in the
. . Queensland UnirersiLy bf Technology paragraph above. Again, there is a significant size increase
in the
. B.isbane, A¢st.alia population of plaque-containing segments from smoke-exposed
cockerels compared with controls. The ew-onmental relevance
I. Cuggins CRE Sidestream cigarerte smoke. Circulation. 1994: was confirmed by showing that carbon
monoxide levels (a surrogate
y9;+9y3 ?or ETS) in taverns where heavy smoking was taking piace equaled
]. Penn A- Snyder CA Inhalation of sidestream cigarette smoke accef- or exceeded the carbon monoxide
levels faced by the cockerels in
eraces de.elopment ofa[heroseterotic plaques. Circula+ion:.1993:88: the one-cigarette exposure
group. Finally, we never say that "ETS
i820-18'_s. -- is a causative agent." We do say that it promotes plaque develop-
3. Glantz SA. Parmley W W, Passive smoking and heart disease: epi- ment. The distinction between
"causation" and "promotion" is not
qa-L.de,...alo gy,-..L, alog AbstractA y, physiology, and biochemisuy. Cixufarion. 1991:83(suppl
semantic and reflects the mechanism by which ETS and other
. . .
4. Lee PN. Environmenml Tobacco Smoke and :NonaliN. Baset- Swi[- environmental agents act iolhis
system.
zerland. S Rarger: 199? ' Arthur Penn, PhD
Response -~ Res Prof Environ Med
We appreciate the concern of Drs Merrilees and Mengersen Carrolf A. Snyder, PhD
regarding questions of standardized values and sampling bias Res Prof Environ Med
values. We recognize that there are definite advantages topre- - NYU Medical Center
senting data without normalizing values. In some of our earliest - '/elson lnsarure
o(Environmental Medicine
studies. we reported plaque sizes as a0ss-sectional areas. (In those . Anthony J Lanza Research
Laboraroder
studies, as in the case of the present sidestream smoke studies, the Turedo, NY
treatments had no significant effect on body weight.) However, morphometrv specialis[s pointed out
that without normalizing Hemodynamic Effects of Sympathetic
Pic
-
plaque size to a separate measure of artery wall dimension, we Efferent Reinnervation After
Orthotopic
would be liable to introduce errors due.to sectioning angle differ- Cardiac Transplantation
.
ences from one artery segment to the next. By including artery To the Editor:
circumference in every calculation of plaque size, we help ensure We were interested in the elegant
demonstration of the hemor~,~
that sectioning affects plaque and the underlying artery wall dynamic effects of sympathetic
relnnervation more than 4 month9tY
similarly. Subsequently, we were commended for taking this pre- after cardiac transplantation,
reported in Circulation by Burke ac
caution by reviewers of one ofourgrant proposals. .' alJ The same group has previously demonstrated
Punetional rein4A
To help alleviate the concern of Drs Merrilees and Mengersen, nervation of the sinus node in a
similar group of subjects.z %J
we reevaluated our data in terms of plaque s¢e only, without We have also investigated the
functional consequences of sym-0
consideratfon of artery wall dimensions, For the controls, median pathetic efferent reinnervation of
the sinus node in 16 humanW_S
~
~
~
