Simulation Modeling of Air and Droplet Temperatures in the Human Respiratory Tract for Inhaled Tobacco Products

Asgharian, Bahman; Price, Owen; Creel, Amy; Chesnutt, Jennifer; Schroeter, Jeffry; Fallica, Jonathan; Erives, Gladys; Rasheed, Nashaat; Chemerynski, Susan

HERO ID

12893072

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2023

Language

English

PMID

36138177

HERO ID 12893072
In Press No
Year 2023
Title Simulation Modeling of Air and Droplet Temperatures in the Human Respiratory Tract for Inhaled Tobacco Products
Authors Asgharian, Bahman; Price, Owen; Creel, Amy; Chesnutt, Jennifer; Schroeter, Jeffry; Fallica, Jonathan; Erives, Gladys; Rasheed, Nashaat; Chemerynski, Susan
Journal Annals of Biomedical Engineering
Volume 51
Issue 4
Abstract Respiratory tract dosimetry predictions for inhalation of tobacco product smoke and aerosols are sensitive to the values of the physicochemical properties of constituents that make up the puff. Physicochemical property values may change significantly with temperature, particularly in the oral cavity and upper airways of the lung, where the puff undergoes adjustments from high temperatures in the tobacco product to reach body temperature. The assumption of fixed property values may introduce uncertainties in the predicted doses in these and other airways of the lung. To obtain a bound for the uncertainties and improve dose predictions, we studied temperature evolution of the inhaled puff in the human respiratory tract during different puff inhalation events. Energy equations were developed for the transport of the puff in the respiratory tract and were solved to find air and droplet temperatures throughout the respiratory tract during two puffing scenarios: 1. direct inhalation of the puff into the lung with no pause in the oral cavity, and 2. puff withdrawal, mouth hold, and puff delivery to the lung via inhalation of dilution air. These puffing scenarios correspond to the majority of smoking scenarios. Model predictions showed that temperature effects were most significant during puff withdrawal. Otherwise, the puff reached thermal equilibrium with the body. Findings from this study will improve predictions of deposition and uptake of puff constituents, and therefore inform inhalation risk assessment from use of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) and combusted cigarettes.
Doi 10.1007/s10439-022-03082-0
Pmid 36138177
Wosid WOS:000859546500002
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public No
Language Text English
Keyword Respiratory tract temperature; Air temperature; Droplet temperature
Is Peer Review No
Is Qa No