Arab Times

Teen vaping tied to marijuana use

‘E-cigarettes as harmful as alcohol, tobacco’

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NEW YORK, Aug 14, (RTRS): Adolescent­s and young adults who have smoked e-cigarettes are more than three times more likely to move on to marijuana than youth who never try vaping, a research review study suggests.

Researcher­s examined data from 21 previously published studies with more than 128,000 participan­ts ages 10 to 24. Overall, young people who used e-cigarettes were 3.5 times more likely to use marijuana, the analysis found.

Teen vapers were most at risk for marijuana use. Among adolescent­s ages 12 to 17, e-cigarette users were 4.3 times more likely to use marijuana. Among young adults ages 18 to 24, vapers were 2.3 times more likely to use marijuana.

“E-cigarettes are often considered benign or harmless by youth and their families,” said Dr Nicholas Chadi, lead author of the study and an assistant professor of pediatrics at Sainte-Justine University Hospital at the University of Montreal in Canada.

“What this study suggests is that e-cigarettes (most of which contain nicotine) should be considered harmful, in a similar way as other substances like alcohol and tobacco, which have also been associated with increased marijuana use,” Chadi said by email.

While teen smoking has long been linked to an increased risk of drug use, US adolescent­s today are more apt to try vaping than smoking traditiona­l cigarettes – and less is known about how e-cigarettes impact future substance use.

Big tobacco companies are all developing e-cigarettes. The battery-powered devices feature a glowing tip and a heating element that turns liquid nicotine and other flavorings into a cloud of vapor that users inhale.

The rise of vaping is problemati­c in part because most people with substance use disorders develop these problems before they turn 18, researcher­s note in JAMA Pediatrics. And adolescent­s whose brains are still developing are more vulnerable than older adults to the addictive properties of nicotine, alcohol, marijuana and other drugs.

In the current analysis, the connection between vaping and marijuana use was stronger for North American young people and for the past two years than for earlier studies or research with participan­ts in Europe or other places.

Vaping in combinatio­n with smoking traditiona­l cigarettes was also more strongly connected to marijuana use than vaping alone.

None of the smaller studies in the analysis were controlled experiment­s, so they could not prove that vaping directly impacts marijuana use. Researcher­s also didn’t examine the health outcomes associated with vaping.

Another limitation of the study is that researcher­s looked at all marijuana use – whether it was trying a single joint one time at a party ages ago or an ongoing daily habit – so it wasn’t possible to see how vaping might impact the frequency of marijuana use.

Even so, it’s possible that experiment­ing with e-cigarettes might make young people more curious about marijuana, reduce perceived harm of marijuana use, and increase the social access to marijuana from peers and friends, said Hongying Dai, a public health researcher at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha who wasn’t involved in the study.

“The brain is still in developmen­t during the teen years and is not mature for young adults, nicotine exposure might lead to changes in the central nervous system that predispose­s teens and young adults to dependence on other drugs of abuse,” Dai said by email.

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