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Health risk of e-cigarettes

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IF YOU are using e-cigarettes then stop doing so. A new study indicates that exposure of e-cigarettes is associated with higher risk of non-alcohol fatty liver diseases.

The findings of the study, in mice, suggests that using e-cigarettes may lead to an accumulati­on of fat in the liver.

“The popularity of electronic cigarettes has been rapidly increasing, in part due to advertisem­ents that they are safer than convention­al cigarettes,” said lead author Theodore C Friedman, Professor at the Charles R Drew University of Medicine and Science in Los Angeles.

“But because extra fat in the liver is likely to be detrimenta­l to health, we conclude that e-cigarettes are not as safe as they have been promoted to consumers,” Friedman added.

In the 12-week study, presented at the ENDO 2018: The Endocrine Society’s 100th Annual Meeting and Expo, researcher­s studied mice missing the gene for apolipopro­tein E, which makes them more prone to developing heart disease and fat in the liver.

All of the mice were fed a diet relatively high in fat and cholestero­l.

One group of mice was put in a chamber that exposed them to e-cigarette aerosol, so that their blood nicotine levels were similar to that of smokers and e-cigarette users. A second group of mice were exposed to saline aerosol.

The researcher­s collected liver samples, and looked at genes in the liver affected by e-cigarettes using a technique called RNA sequence analysis.

They found changes in 433 genes that were associated with fatty liver developmen­t and progressio­n in the mice exposed to e-cigarettes.

The researcher­s also found that genes related to circadian rhythms (the body clock) were changed in mice exposed to e-cigarettes.

Circadian rhythm dysfunctio­n is known to accelerate the developmen­t of liver disease, including fatty liver diseases. – IANS

 ?? PICTURE: WIKIPEDIA.ORG ??
PICTURE: WIKIPEDIA.ORG

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