Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Teens use e-cigarettes for ;dripping’ – study

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NEW HAVEN: Yale researcher­s have found in a study that one in four high school pupils who use electronic cigarettes are inhaling vapours produced by dripping e-liquids directly on to heating coils, instead of inhaling from the e-cigarette mouthpiece, possibly increasing exposure to toxins and nicotine.

This form of e-cigarette use is known as “dripping”.

It produces thicker clouds of vapour and a stronger hit in the back of the throat when inhaled, according to the study, published online in the journal Pediatrics.

Applying the liquid directly to the battery-powered coil heats it at a higher temperatur­e than inhaling from a cartridge or tank, possibly increasing exposure to harmful chemicals like formaldehy­de, acetaldehy­de and acrolein in the vapours.

The Yale study recommends regulators consider imposing restrictio­ns so e-cigarettes cannot be modified for uses like dripping.

“One of the concerns I have is when you are looking at the safety and risk of e-cigarettes, one really has to look at the risks of alternativ­e uses also,” said Suchitra Krishnan-Sarin, professor of psychiatry at Yale and first author of the study.

“What we are discoverin­g with our work with youth is that kids are actually using these electronic products for other behaviours, not just for vaping e-liquids from cartridges or tanks.”

Krishnan-Sarin said people who used e-cigarettes tended to puff on them throughout the day and that researcher­s didn’t know the short and long-term consequenc­es of exposing lungs to the vapours.

“Everybody assumes vaping is a safer way (than cigarettes) of administer­ing nicotine, but we know so little about the risks of vaping.” –

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