Abstract

Smoking is harmful for respiratory function. In young to middle-aged men the damage is insidious and difficult to demonstrate. The respiratory impairment could increase under specific stressful conditions in the professional environment. On the hypothesis that exhaled markers are useful for assessing airway susceptibility to inhaled irritants, we measured exhaled markers and lung function in smoking and non-smoking engine-driver military coastguards before and after a patrol at sea. Eighteen men, mean age 39 yrs (range 23-58 yrs), 8 smokers, underwent spirometry, exhaled and nasal nitric oxide (eNO, nNO), exhaled carbon monoxide (CO) and exhaled breath condensate (EBC) for measures of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), leukotriene B4 (LTB4), proteins (Prots), 8-isoprostanes (8-IsoPs), nitrite (NO2-) and nitrosothiols (RS-NOs) at baseline and after an 8-hour patrol navigation on board small, high-speed diesel-powered ships. At baseline, the smokers showed higher middle flows and CO levels, lower eNO and nNO than non-smokers, but similar levels of EBC markers; geometric means (95% confidence interval), CO: 23.6 (14.5 to 38.3) vs. 3.5 (2.5 to 5.3) ppm; eNO: 7.9 (4.8 to 12.9) vs. 26.7 (15.7 to 45.5) ppb, p=0.000. After navigation, Prots, 8-IsoPs and RS-NOs (but not lung function variables or other markers) significantly increased only in smokers; baseline vs post-navigation RS-NOs: 0.27 (0.11 to 0.65) vs. 1.30 (0.58 to 2.89) micromol, p=0.012. The respiratory consequences of a stressing environment in engine-driver military coastguards who actively smoke are better assessed by measuring EBC markers than by eNO, nNO or lung function. By increasing airway inflammation from oxidative-stress, tobacco smoking appears to interact with other chemical or physical factors elicited during sea navigation. Precisely what these factors are deserves further investigation.

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