Vaping Likely Has Dangers That Could Take Years for Scientists to Even Know About

Vaping Likely Has Dangers That Could Take Years for Scientists to Even Know About

Photo by Nery Zarate on Unsplash

The rise in cases of otherwise healthy young adults who have been hospitalized or even died from vaping-associated lung injury is alarming.

Many people don’t know what is contained in these vaping devices, what the reported health effects actually mean, and, most importantly, why all of this developed so quickly, considering that e-cigarettes have only been popular for fewer than 10 years.

Vaping describes the process of inhaling aerosols generated by devices such as e-cigarettes.

When e-cigarettes first came to the U.S. in 2006, many smoking cessation experts were optimistic. They viewed the delivery of nicotine through e-cigarettes to be a useful alternative to traditional cigarettes. That is because e-cigarettes did not have all of the other harmful combustion products inhaled through cigarette smoke. Since there is no doubt that smoking traditional cigarettes is harmful to your health – and the number one cause of preventable death in the U.S. – e-cigarettes were marketed as a “safer” alternative.

As an inhalation toxicologist, I study how inhaled chemicals, particles and other agents affect human health. Since e-cigarettes were introduced, I have been concerned about how the scientific community could possibly know the full spectrum of their dangers. After all, it took decades for epidemiologists to discover that regularly inhaling the smoke from burning plant material, tobacco, caused lung cancer. Why would the scientific community be so quick to assume e-cigarettes would not have hidden dangers that might take years to manifest too?

Do e-cigarettes even work as a cessation tool?

Many smokers have reported that switching from cigarettes to e-cigarettes has helped their physical well-being, including reduced coughing.

But a few randomized clinical trials examining the use of e-cigarettes as a cessation tool have shown mixed results. While some trials demonstrate a significant increase in cessation success (from 9.9% to 18%), people using e-cigarettes were much more likely to remain dependent on nicotine as compared to those randomized for more traditional nicotine replacement products, such as nicotine patch, gum and nasal spray. Or, they were more likely to relapse to using cigarettes.

In short, whether, how, and to what extent e-cigarettes have potential as a cessation tool is not yet settled, especially considering that more than 80% of smokers randomized to use e-cigarettes continued to smoke after the cessation trial.

Safer than a spitting cobra

Cessation claims aside, the messaging of e-cigarettes as a “safer” alternative may have led many of the 3.6 million teenagers in the U.S. who use e-cigarettes today to believe these devices are “safe.” “Safer” does not equal “safe,” and the messaging of “safer” was based on comparisons to cigarettes.

Public Health England, the equivalent of the FDA in the U.K., stated in 2015 that “while vaping may not be 100% safe, most of the chemicals causing smoking-related disease are absent and the chemicals that are present pose limited danger.”

This statement did not consider the fact that health effects of inhaling flavoring chemicals contained in popular e-cigarettes are completely unknown, or that heating liquids in these devices causes thermal decomposition of those e-cigarette chemicals that “pose limited danger” into known toxicants. It also did not consider that e-cigarettes are a fast evolving consumer product with ever-changing devices and chemicals, creating mixtures and exposures of unknown health consequences.

This mistake was further advanced by assessing the adverse health effects caused by using e-cigarettes as a comparison to what occurs when someone smokes cigarettes for several years. It is well established that smoking cigarettes causes diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic bronchitis, emphysema and cancer. Many of these diseases do not manifest clinically until many years after the first cigarette has been smoked.

No controlled studies were ever conducted assessing whether using e-cigarettes causes any adverse health effects in people who never smoke. To this day, scientists do not know the potential long-term health consequences of using e-cigarettes for decades.

E-cigarettes cause very different health effects than cigarettes

I think that scientists and policymakers should completely stop comparing vaping outcomes to smoking outcomes. The now 450-plus confirmed cases of vaping-associated lung injuries prove this point. The clinical manifestations in these patients are not something a doctor would ever see in somebody who has been smoking cigarettes for a few months.

Similarly, these clinical outcomes have not been reported in marijuana users, even though THC, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, has now been associated with a large percentage of these cases.

Furthermore, the onset of these significant health problems is much faster than one would anticipate from smoking-related diseases. Since doctors are seeing severe diseases after relatively short exposures, does that make vaping more harmful than cigarettes?

Considering that the compounds inhaled through cigarette smoke are very different from those inhaled through the vast number of different flavored e-cigarettes and vaping devices, wouldn’t that be like comparing apples and oranges? Nobody would consider it reasonable to compare health effects caused by smoking cigarettes to those induced by smoking crack.

A lot of attention is now being placed on identifying the potential “culprit” for the observed health effects in the more than 450 cases of vaping-induced lung injury. Additives contained in THC liquids have emerged as a potential cause.

However, not all cases identified by the CDC have a documented history of vaping THC, and some have only reported a history of using nicotine products. Furthermore, case reports of vaping-associated lung injury with symptoms similar to those reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention but no history of THC use have been documented before, suggesting that vaping-associated lung injury has been detected before this recent rise in reported cases.

In addition, other vaping-associated clinical outcomes have been reported as well, indicating that vaping-induced adverse health effects can vary. Hence, it is premature to draw any conclusions regarding which compounds – and there are likely several – inhaled by vaping nicotine or THC containing products are causing specific types of lung injury.

While it is too early to say whether or to what extent e-cigarettes can be used to support smoking cessation, one conclusion can already be drawn: Vaping is not without health effects.

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Ilona Jaspers, Professor of pediatrics, microbiology and immunology, and environmental sciences and engineering, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Vaping Likely Has Dangers That Could Take Years for Scientists to Even Know About

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: September 11, 2019

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: September 11, 2019

HRC REMEMBERS THE LIVES LOST ON SEPTEMBER 11TH: More from HRC.

On this somber day, let us work toward a safer world, a stronger nation and unite in the quest for peace and equality for all. #NeverForget #September11th pic.twitter.com/CvRg6zAWo1

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) September 11, 2019

PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIAN AMY STULMAN WRITES FOR QUARTZ ON THE IMPORTANCE OF TRANS-INCLUSIVE HEALTH CARE: “These days, there is a growing number of primary care providers like myself who specialize in transgender care. But it shows how far we have to go when taking care of trans patients is considered a specialty in the first place, rather than just part of normal daily practice,” Stulman writes. More from Quartz

WHAT WE’RE READING WEDNESDAY — HRC’S PARENTS FOR TRANSGENDER EQUALITY NATIONAL COUNCIL MEMBER LIZETTE TRUJILLO IS LEADING THE CHARGE FOR LGBTQ-INCLUSIVE SEX EDUCATION: More from HRC

Volunteer and member of @HRC Foundation’s Parents for Transgender Equality National Council Lizette Trujillo is fighting for a more inclusive, supportive future for her son and all students in Tuscon.

Join her on Tuesday → t.co/9lWWDwRa3m t.co/cD40XnmZdr

— HRC in Arizona (@HRCaz) September 9, 2019

LAUREN JACKSON, A TRANSGENDER WOMAN WHO WAS ATTACKED IN OREGON, IS HEALING AND FLOURISHING: “I’m in the best place in my life, even after this attack,” Jackson said. “I’m happier, more peaceful and loving life more than ever before… Because I’m just me. I haven’t always been.” More from The Salt Lake Tribune

FIRST-EVER CLEVELAND TRANSGENDER CELEBRATION WAS HELD ON SUNDAY: More from News 5 Cleveland

SAINT JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN DEXTER, MICHIGAN, FORMS “OPEN HEARTS CLUB” FOR LGBTQ YOUTH AND ALLIES: More from The Sun Times News

THE ONE-YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA’S POLICE LGBTQ LIAISON TEAM: The anniversary coincides with the recent shooting death of Black gay man Darren Laval Carter. The liaison unit was formed after four transgender women were shot and three were killed over a five-month period in 2018. More from Florida Times-Union

HORRIBLE — MAN VERBALLY ATTACKS QUEER, JEWISH MAN ADAM ELI IN NYC: Eli (@aewerner) caputured video of the incident and posted it to Twitter, saying: “if this is the type of violence that [the] most priviledged queer peope are getting, can you even imagine what it’s like every single day… to be a trans person, or a gender non-conforming person, or a queer person of color.” More from NBC 4 New York

HRC MARKED WORLD SUICIDE PREVENTION DAY YESTERDAY: More from HRC.

No one should ever be made to feel alone & hopeless simply for who they are. If you or someone you know is struggling, call:@800273TALK: 1-800-273-8255@TrevorProject LGBTQ Hotline: 1-866-488-7386@TransLifeline: 1-877-565-8860#WorldSuicidePreventionDay t.co/LnMoBL7owL

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) September 10, 2019

GLOBAL EQUALITY NEWS

FIVE THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT THE ATTACKS ON THE LGBTQ COMMUNITY IN POLAND: More from HRC

QUEER TANGO IS CHANGING MINDS IN ARGENTINA AND PROVIDING COMMUNITY FOR THE LGBTQ COMMUNITY: More from BBC

READING RAINBOW – Bookmark now to read on your lunch break!

The Advocate reports on a new play, As Much As I Can, that focuses on gay and bisexual Black men living with HIV; Reuters looks at a new documentary, “For They Know Not What They Do,” about transgender people who have undergone so-called “conversion therapy” and their families

Have news? Send us your news and tips at [email protected]. Click here to subscribe to #AM_Equality and follow @HRC for all the latest news. Thanks for reading!

www.hrc.org/blog/am-equality-tipsheet-september-11-2019?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Teachers, Students Leave High School After Official Email Requires Them to Disavow Same-Sex Relationships: WATCH

Teachers, Students Leave High School After Official Email Requires Them to Disavow Same-Sex Relationships: WATCH

Five teachers chose to leave their jobs at King’s High School in Shoreline, Washington and at least two students have been unenrolled after administrators at the Christian school sent out an email “they perceived as requiring them to disavow same-sex relationships,” the Seattle Times reports.

KIRO reports: ‘An email was also sent to families of students at the school and stated, “King’s upholds the historical Biblical standard of morality that sexual expression is confined within the marriage of one man and one woman.” Teachers were told they needed to follow that belief at school and in their personal lives. CRISTA Ministries CEO Jacinta Tegman said a few staff members weren’t comfortable with the policy and chose to leave.’

The Seattle Times adds: ‘Tegman, who previously fought to repeal a state gay-rights law and led opposition to same-sex marriage in Washington, took the helm of CRISTA as its president and CEO in January. She centered her first State of CRISTA address on the need for practical and spiritual reform at the organization.’

Said Tegman to KIRO: “When it comes to sexual expression the Bible teaches us that sexual intimacy is reserved between a marriage between one man and one woman . And we, as a faith-based Christian organization uphold that belief and teaching. We hire people who profess to be Christians and that they would uphold the teachings of the Bible. But we serve anyone regardless of their position. If they want to be here, we want them to be here.”

The post Teachers, Students Leave High School After Official Email Requires Them to Disavow Same-Sex Relationships: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Teachers, Students Leave High School After Official Email Requires Them to Disavow Same-Sex Relationships: WATCH