YOU (South Africa)

NEW STUDIES REVEAL WHY IT MAY NOT BE SAFE TO VAPE

Cancer, lung disease, heart conditions

-

YOU’LL see them in cars, gathered outside office buildings and hanging around bars and nightclubs: people shrouded in clouds of aromatic “smoke”, pulling on hitech-looking devices a little thicker than a pencil. They’re the growing band of smokers the world over who are taking to vaping, a much-hailed “safer” alternativ­e to cigarettes and a pastime touted as an effective way to give up convention­al smoking.

Yet new research might make vapers want to reconsider inhaling the stuff their e-cigarettes produce – because these devices could apparently lead to several scary diseases.

What the boffins found

Scientists at New York University (NYU) led by environmen­tal professor MoonShong Tang exposed laboratory mice to electronic cigarette vapour for 12 weeks. The dose and duration of the nicotine exposure was the equivalent of 10 years of light e-cigarette smoking in humans.

Researcher­s found DNA damage in the hearts, lungs and bladders of mice exposed to the vapours. This damage wasn’t found in a control group of animals that breathed ordinary filtered air.

Natural DNA repair mechanisms were also found to be suppressed in the mice exposed to the smoke.

Nicotine inhaled from e-cigarettes could be converted into chemicals that damage DNA and slow down the body’s genetic repair mechanisms, Tang concluded.

He also found that exposing human lung and bladder cells to nicotine and its breakdown products made the cells turn into tumour tissue more easily.

Tang and his team concluded that although vaping delivers fewer carcinogen­s (substances that cause cancer) than tobacco smoke, e-cigarette smokers might have a higher risk of developing lung and bladder cancer as well as heart disease.

But then others say . . .

The NYU mice may have become the poster children for the dangers of vaping but other researcher­s have dismissed these findings as irrelevant to human smokers. The animals were exposed to extremely large doses of nicotine and this can’t be compared to the consumptio­n of vapour in humans, says Peter Hajek, director of the Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine’s tobacco dependence research unit at Queen Mary University of London. Jasmine Just of Cancer Research UK agrees. The study looked at the effect of e-cigarettes on mice, she says, and it’s not possible to draw conclusion­s about how vaping affects humans. “Research in people has shown that those who make a switch from smoking tobacco to e-cigarettes can significan­tly reduce their exposure to the key harmful chemicals in tobacco smoke.”

And then there’s this

Soon after the Tang study was released, a study published in the European Respirator­y Journal suggested users of

Some claim they’re safer than smoking but studies suggest e-cigarettes may increase the risk of DNA damage and other health problems BY KHATIJA NXEDLANA Researcher­s found DNA damage in the mice exposed to the vapours

e-cigarettes might be at higher risk of lung infection.

Scientists at Queen Mary University conducted three experiment­s: one exposed human nose-lining cells to e-cigarette vapour in a lab; another involved mice inhaling vapour and then being exposed to pneumococc­al bacteria, the main cause of pneumonia; and a third studied the nose lining of 11 e-cigarette users compared with that of six non-vapers.

The team noticed a sharp increase in the amount of bacteria sticking to airway cells after e-cigarette exposure.

This has previously been shown to increase people’s susceptibi­lity to disease.

“Some people might be vaping because they think it’s totally safe or in an attempt to quit smoking, but this study adds to growing evidence that inhaling vapour has the potential to cause adverse health effects,” said Professor Jonathan Grigg, co-author of the study.

“By contrast, other aids to quitting such as nicotine patches or gum don’t result in airway cells being exposed to high concentrat­ions of potentiall­y toxic compounds.”

But this study also has its detractors. Peter Openshaw, an experiment­al medicine professor at Imperial College London, says any evidence that vaping raised the risk of lung infection was only indirect.

“Although it’s possible that vaping might increase susceptibi­lity to pneumonia, the effect is likely to be lower than from smoking itself,” he said.

“This study shouldn’t be used as a reason to continue to smoke rather than vape – the evidence so far is that e-cigarettes are far less harmful than smoking.”

What do South African experts say?

There’s no scientific evidence that vaping is safer than smoking, says Professor Michael Herbst of the Cancer Associatio­n of South Africa (Cansa).

“E-cigarettes have been around only since 2004 and insufficie­nt scientific research has been conducted to really declare e-cigarettes ‘safer’ than cigarettes,” he says. “The long-term effects of e-cigarettes on the human body remain unknown.”

Savera Kalideen, executive director of the National Council against Smoking, says it considers vaping less harmful than smoking cigarettes but not harmless.

She believes there’s enough evidence to show that e-cigarettes have been linked to damage and inflammati­on of the airways and lung disease, as well as stiffening of the arteries that can lead to heart attacks and strokes.

“We’d recommend that those who want to give up smoking do so without the aid of e-cigarettes.”

Vaping goes viral

The popularity of e-cigarettes is increasing rapidly in South Africa, with “a proliferat­ion of vape stores in shopping malls and places where young people congregate”, Kalideen says.

The industry is clearly targeting young people by introducin­g flavours such as cream soda float and chocolate “to mask the unpleasant flavour of ecigarette­s to encourage young people to use them”, she adds.

The liquid in an e-cigarette usually contains nicotine, the addictive ingredient in cigarettes – but nicotine on its own is no more harmful than caffeine, says Greg Oliver, CEO of e-cigarette company Evolution Vape. e dangers associated with smoking cigarettes come from the tar and toxic gases released from burning tobacco. “The e-liquid is added to a device that contains a disposable coil, which is made up of organic cotton and a metal coil element. “When the device is activated with an ignition button, the coil heats up and converts the e-liquid on the cotton into a vapour that’s inhaled,” Oliver explains. Kalideen agrees that e-cigarettes have substantia­lly less nicotine than cigarettes, but “they release toxins in the vapours they produce. It’s these toxins that can harm health.”

Calling it quits

“Feedback from our customers has been that vaping has been the most appropriat­e enabler to quit smoking cigarettes,” Oliver says.

Vaping also eliminates the effects of secondhand smoke and negates the unpleasant odour cigarettes create.

But Kalideen says there’s no evidence that vaping has reduced the number of cigarette smokers in SA.

There are still about six million smokers in the country and around 500 000 vapers, she adds.

“Most people who call our Quitline are looking for assistance to stop smoking completely. We don’t propose e-cigarettes as an alternativ­e.”

Not only are they “less satisfying” as they contain less nicotine, they’re also vastly more expensive than cigarettes. SOURCES: THE GUARDIAN, DAILY MAIL, DAILY MAVERICK, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, INDEPENDEN­T BRITISH VAPE TRADE ASSOCIATIO­N, AFP, BD LIVE, VAPING POST

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa