Incense Smoke
I have
read that exposures to incense smoke may cause cancer particularly
in children. We burn incense regularly. Should we be concerned
about our children? Anon
In a posting on this website on May
24, 2001 it was indicated that little published information was
available on either the emissions from burning incense or its
potential health effects. Since that time, however, there has been
a significant increase in the number of studies that have focused on
incense and its potential health effects and awareness of other
published studies.
Studies on incense have tried to
take into account that a variety of substances/materials can be
burnt as incense. Substances used to produce incense includes
resins such as frankincense (from the sacred Boswella tree) and
myrrh; spices, aromatic wood and bark, seeds, roots, flowers,
aromatic oils, and a variety of synthetic materials. Incense is
available as sticks, cones, coils, powders, rope, rocks/charcoal and
smudge bundles.
Incense sticks are made from a
slender piece of wood to which incense substances are attached; joss
sticks are formed from the incense material itself. Cones are
pointed at the top to facilitate ignition and as they burn down to a
larger diameter base produce much more smoke. Coils are designed to
burn for a long time and have often contained an insecticide to
control insects. Smudge bundles are bundled herbs and twigs which
tend to produce large quantities of smoke.
Your question relates to an issue
raised in previous postings; that is, the potential for incense
combustion by-products to cause cancer in individuals exposed over a
period of time. In a 1982 study, a significant correlation was
reported between maternal contact with nitrosamine-containing
substances such as incense and brain cancer in children (however, in
a 1994 Australian study no relationship was observed between brain
cancer and post-natal incense burning).
Another study showed an increased risk of developing leukemia for
children whose parents burnt incense in the home before pregnancy or
during the nursing period. A study conducted in Singapore reported
that incense burning increased the relative risk of lung cancer .
However, four other studies conducted in different countries were
not able to show that exposure to incense smoke increased the risk
of developing lung cancer.
Burning incense like many other
materials has the potential to produce carcinogens. The most
notable of these are benzene and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).
Exposure to benzene has been definitively shown to cause leukemia
in industrial workers and there is limited evidence to indicate that
emissions of benzene in tobacco smoke is responsible for the
increased risk of childhood leukemia in smoking households. In a
1991 study a benzene production rate of 420-440 µg per gram of
benzene burnt was reported. In large chamber studies conducted in
Hong Kong, benzene levels increased by more than 15 fold from
pre-incense burning levels. In Danish studies, an exposure of 1.8
µg/kg body weight per day was estimated as a result of burning one
incense stick in an under-ventilated room.
PAHs are a class of higher
carcinogenic compounds commonly found in the smoke of combusted
organic materials. PAHs, as would be expected, have been found in
the smoke from burning incense and in the settled dust of buildings
where incense has been burnt.
Should you be concerned about
potential cancer and other health risks to your children because you
regularly burn incense? The answer is of course yes. Though the
science is limited, there is sufficient evidence to practice
“prudent avoidance,” that is, don’t subject your children or family
to a potential risk like this that can be very easily avoided.
November 3, 2006