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Hookahs: Where there’s smoke, there are toxins

By | January 6, 2010, 4:00 AM PST

Hookah bars, where people go to smoke flavored tobacco from a hookah, or waterpipe, are becoming increasingly popular in North America. On average, there are five new hookah bars opened every month, and in 2008, 470 were already open, according to HookahBars.com.

After a hookah bar opened in his community, Tom Eissenberg, a professor of psychology at Virginia Commonwealth University’s Institute for Drug and Alcohol Studies, began studying the effects of waterpipe tobacco smoking. The results bust the myth that waterpipe-smoking is less toxic than puffing away on a cigarette—in fact, it’s worse.

Who uses waterpipes?

It’s largely the 18 to 25-year-old crowd. If you go into a waterpipe bar in Richmond and ask people to fill out a survey, which I did, you’ll find many of them 18 to 22. There’s a reason for that–because they’re not old enough to drink, and alcohol’s not served there. They have big-screen TVs, show movies, serve food.

And you found in your surveys that users don’t think this type of tobacco smoking is bad for them?

The biggest thing is that they use the “f” word—the water filters the smoke. This has been studied, and there’s no reason to believe that the water acts as a filter. There are folks who are purists about the experience and don’t like the idea of cigarettes. They’ll say—as smoke is coming out of their mouth– “Oh, I’m not a smoker.” They’re very aware of risks of cigarette smoking. And they’ll say, “If it was dangerous I would have heard of it by now.” They see cigarette smoking as completely different.

Explain how this study worked.

We invited waterpipe users who also used cigarettes. In one session they smoked a cigarette and sat around while we took breath samples and blood samples and measured their heart rate. In another session they did the same with a waterpipe. A single cigarette takes about five minutes to smoke, and waterpipes are used for an average of 45 minutes, but we took measurements at the same intervals. (A second study is underway with people who only smoke waterpipes.)

How much tobacco is used in a waterpipe versus a cigarette?

We put 15 grams of tobacco in the waterpipe head, but the tobacco you put in is wet—it’s been soaked in honey or something else sweet and maybe chunks of fruit added, so it’s really 15 grams of shisha, versus one gram of tobacco in the cigarette. The other thing about the pipe is that because the tobacco is so wet, you can’t just hold a lighter to it. So it’s topped with charcoal, which is important because you’re not just inhaling tobacco smoke but also charcoal.

What did you find in your research?

We found waterpipe users are exposed to three times the carbon monoxide (in 45 minutes) as the user of a single cigarette (in five minutes). But even after five minutes of smoking, there’s significantly more exposure from waterpipe. A study has shown the charcoal used in the waterpipe is responsible for that increase. As far as nicotine, we also saw a greater exposure with the waterpipe than the cigarette.

We also measured how people smoke—how many puffs, how big the puff is. With a waterpipe, the water cools the smoke, so you can take a much bigger inhalation. We found waterpipe users have 48 times the smoke inhalation (based on puffs and volume) as cigarette users.

So how risky is this kind of tobacco use?

I cannot answer that right now, because that data doesn’t exist. But we can look at what’s in the smoke and compare that to the cigarette—and what causes cancer and cardiovascular disease. We know carbon monoxide is what causes cardiovascular disease in smokers. The fact that studies don’t exist [for waterpipes] does not mean it’s safe, just that the research hasn’t been done.

Are waterpipe smokers surprised by your findings?

Surprised is probably not the right word. Disbelieving, yes.

Do you think this will help debunk the myth that smoking tobacco from waterpipes is OK?

It’s surprising how strong the myth is. We want to get the word out that this is not a benign activity. We haven’t done the epidemiology yet, so we don’t know all the dangers, but we know the toxin exposure. If you’re smoking a waterpipe because you think you’re avoiding dangers of cigarette use, you’re wrong. We know there’s carbon monoxide in the smoke, and we know there’s nicotine in the smoke, so there’s a likelihood that people will become dependent on the waterpipes. The bottom line is that there are the same poisons in waterpipe smoke as there are in cigarette smoke, which we know people are dying from. It’s remarkable how successful we’ve been making sure people know cigarettes are dangerous. I want to duplicate that with waterpipes.

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Melanie D.G. Kaplan

About Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Melanie D.G. Kaplan is a contributing writer for SmartPlanet.

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Contributing Writer

Melanie D.G. Kaplan is a regular contributor to The Washington Post and Nomad Edition's Good Dog and has written for The New York Times, National Geographic Traveler and People. She holds degrees from Syracuse University and Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. She is based in Washington, D.C.

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Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

In addition to working as a journalist, Melanie keeps the dog food fund flush with occasional consulting jobs. In the unusual event that her writing mentions a company or organization for which she has provided editorial services, she will disclose that fact. She will do the same should she cover any companies in which she holds investments.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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+1 Vote
+ -
I use Hookah about 5 times a year
I don't smoke cigarettes. And yes, the internet is very good at spewing
out the fact that the water filters the smoke. I guess I have to come
to terms with the fact that it is indeed harmful.

I would, hoever, like to see the study done with tobacco-free shisha as
well. A lot of us use that kind.

Very interesting article. I'm waiting for the results.
Posted by qcesarjr@...
6th Jan 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Hookahs: Where there's smoke, there are toxins
Isn't the most dangerous element of cigarette smoke the tar resulting from burnt paper?

If that's the case then it makes smoking cigars, pipes, and hookahs less dangerous than cigarettes.
Posted by OldGuru
6th Jan 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Hookahs: Where there's smoke, there are toxins
At 5 times a year you're probably not doing too much damage qcesarjr. However, smoking tobacco free shisha still has a lot of carbon monoxide in it plus there are a great deal of other volatile things coming off the shisha and charcoal. No nicotine without the tobacco, but the nicotine is not the component in tobacco smoke that is responsible for cancer, it is other volatile radicals and organic compounds. whether they are in tobacco free shisha or not is still being investigated.
Posted by mikejwatson
6th Jan 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Hookahs: Where there's smoke, there are toxins
"Isn't the most dangerous element of cigarette smoke the tar resulting from burnt paper? "

No, that is not correct. The paper has very little in it the tar comes from the plant. Tobacco, marijuana, and shisha (tobacco free or not) all have tars in them.
Posted by mikejwatson
6th Jan 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
Water doesn't filter the smoke
It encapsulates it and cools it from the point of entry until it bursts the surface.

Surface tension on the inside of the bubble is enough to prevent most particle filtration from occurring. If you can taste the smoke, you're not filtering anything.

As the study says, a single hookah session exposed smokers to 3 times the amount of CO as a single cigarette. 3 times the exposure to the substance that causes cardiovascular disease.
Posted by Dr_Zinj
6th Jan 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Hookahs: Where there's smoke, there are toxins
Well, I have yet to try the hookah, but I think the whole smoking thing is overblown (no pun intended). There is as much mis-information promulgated by the anti-smoking cartel as there ever was by the tobacco companies.

I'm not saying there is no risk or danger at all, but it is terribly exaggerated by the antis.
Posted by Rodo1
6th Jan 2010
-1 Votes
+ -
RE: Hookahs: Where there's smoke, there are toxins
It encapsulates it and cools it from the point of entry until it bursts the surface.
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Posted by sabridino
14th Jan 2010
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