The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Vaping injuries: Some patients are admitted a second time

-

FEDERAL health officials investigat­ing mysterious vapingrela­ted lung injuries said Friday that some patients are being hospitaliz­ed for a second time, a disturbing new developmen­t in the ongoing national outbreak that has spread to every state except Alaska.

“We are aware of a handful of patients who have been readmitted for clinical care after discharge for lung injury,” said Anne Schuchat, the principal deputy director at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which is heading the public health investigat­ion.

The hospital readmissio­ns have taken place as quickly as five days and up to 55 days after discharge, Schuchat said. It’s not known what triggered the relapses. In some cases, patients had resumed vaping. It’s also possible that initial lung damage made patients more vulnerable to other illness. Another possibilit­y, she said, is that treatment with steroids, which many clinicians have been using to care for such injuries, may “set you up for increased infection risk.”

CDC did not reveal exactly how many cases of relapse have been reported, but Schuchat said they are aware of fewer than five such cases among the 1,299 that have been reported. At least 28 people have died in the vapingrela­ted outbreak.

A 17-year-old male from the Bronx who died from vapingrela­ted injuries Oct. 4 had been hospitaliz­ed twice. He was first hospitaliz­ed in early September and readmitted later that month. New York officials reported his death Tuesday. New York health officials are investigat­ing the products he vaped.

In Utah, there have been two cases where patients were readmitted after they resumed vaping, according to Dixie Harris, a pulmonolog­ist and critical care physician with Intermount­ain Healthcare in Salt Lake City. The health system has cared for more than 60 cases. Both patients resumed vaping and “they ended up with surgery and significan­t lung complicati­ons,” she said. To protect their privacy, she declined to provide additional details.

Doctors and officials are particular­ly concerned about the young people who have fallen ill. Eighty percent are under 35 years old, and 15per cent are under 18. Of 80 patients under 18 for whom CDC has complete clinical informatio­n, 56 required intensive care and almost one in three needed mechanical ventilatio­n to breathe, Schuchat said.

In many cases, doctors say, teenagers have told them they vaped as a way to deal with stress and anxiety. Doctors said those underlying problems need to be addressed.

“I think we miss the boat if we treat the lung disease and then send them home to high risk for recurrence,” said Anne Griffiths, a pediatric pulmonolog­ist at Children’s Minnesota who has personally treated about half of the two dozen cases at the pediatric hospital and reviews all the state’s vaping-related cases. Some of the teens have told doctors they rely on vaping THC to help them sleep, she said. “My response to them is, if you are sedated, that’s not the same as healthy sleep,” she said. The bottom line, she said: “Dischargin­g children home after this lung injury without counseling or therapy or addiction management, I think, is a big mistake.”

In Dallas, pediatric pulmonolog­ist Devika Rao at UT Southweste­rn Medical Center said of the hospital’s approximat­ely one dozen cases, “a minority” of cases have involved relapse. Some of patients are struggling with difficult social situations and family dynamics, and also have anxiety and depression, Rao said. Doctors are working with addiction psychiatri­sts to address the patients’ mental needs, she said.

To help clinicians better diagnose and treat these cases, the CDC released more specific guidelines Friday. The guidelines emphasize a close follow-up of patients because some with only mild symptoms experience­d a rapid worsening within 48 hours. The CDC is also recommendi­ng that healthcare providers strongly advise patients to stop using e-cigarette or vaping products. For those with addiction to nicotine or THC products, patients should consider cognitive behavioral therapy and consultati­on with addiction medicine services, the guidelines state.

With the start of flu season, the CDC is also stressing the importance for health-care providers to ask patients about their use of e-cigarette or vaping products “in a nonjudgmen­tal way.” Vaping-related injuries and respirator­y viral illnesses, such as influenza, have similar symptoms: cough, shortness of breath and difficulty breathing. In the vaping-related cases, nearly 80per cent also have gastrointe­stinal symptoms, including abdominal pain, nausea and diarrhea, officials said.

Officials still don’t know the cause of the injuries. Schuchat said there may be more than one cause. The most recent data confirms earlier informatio­n that most patients used products containing THC, the psychoacti­ve ingredient in marijuana.

CDC on Friday backed away from its earlier, broader recommenda­tion against using all vaping products and narrowed its recommenda­tion instead to warn individual­s against using ecigarette or vaping products that contain THC, especially those bought off the street.

But a small proportion of patients have reported exclusivel­y using nicotine-containing products, and many people with these lung injuries have reported combined use of THC- and nicotine-containing products. The CDC said that agency officials cannot exclude the possibilit­y that nicotine-containing products play a role in this outbreak.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion has collected over 725 samples from roughly half the states with reported cases. But the agency’s forensics lab in Cincinnati has only been able to initiate testing for about 300 samples because many samples contain little or no liquid, said Mitch Zeller, director of FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products. Of 225 products tested that contain THC, nearly half contained vitamin E acetate, a cutting agent used to stretch the amount of THC in vape cartridges, he said. Experts in the legal marijuana industry have said vitamin E acetate has been used on the marijuana black market because it is colorless and odorless, has similar viscosity to THC oil, and is much cheaper.

Vitamin E acetate, which is sold legally, is commonly used as a nutritiona­l supplement and in skin-care products. It’s not harmful when ingested or applied to the skin. But health officials have warned it could be hazardous when inhaled, potentiall­y causing the sorts of symptoms many patients have reported: cough, shortness of breath and chest pain.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? US first lady Melania Trump, joined by US Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, White House advisor Kellyanne Conway and Eric Asche, chief marketing officer at Truth Initiative, meets with teens on their experience with vaping as part of her ‘Be Best’ initiative at the White House in Washington, US.
— Reuters photo US first lady Melania Trump, joined by US Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, White House advisor Kellyanne Conway and Eric Asche, chief marketing officer at Truth Initiative, meets with teens on their experience with vaping as part of her ‘Be Best’ initiative at the White House in Washington, US.
 ??  ?? Jeffrey Manzanares, 33, lies in the intensive care unit of the University of Utah Hospital while being treated for vaping injury and other lung infections in Salt Lake City, Utah, US.
Jeffrey Manzanares, 33, lies in the intensive care unit of the University of Utah Hospital while being treated for vaping injury and other lung infections in Salt Lake City, Utah, US.
 ??  ?? File photo showing a man uses a vape device in this illustrati­on picture.
File photo showing a man uses a vape device in this illustrati­on picture.
 ??  ?? File photo shows a man uses a vape as he walks on Broadway in New York City, US.
File photo shows a man uses a vape as he walks on Broadway in New York City, US.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia