Khaleej Times

Dozens of US teenagers hospitalis­ed after vaping

- LUNG INJURIES

washington— US health officials are investigat­ing the cases of dozens of people, mainly teens, who were hospitalis­ed with severe lung injuries in recent weeks after vaping, though the precise cause of their illnesses remains a mystery.

Health department­s in Illinois, Minnesota and Wisconsin have issued statements describing cases involving patients who exhibited coughs, shortness of breath, dizziness and fatigue, symptoms that led them to hospitals where they had to be intubated.

Officials in the three states, which have reported at least 30 confirmed cases and 22 under investigat­ion, said it was too early to say whether the illnesses were connected, but were working with each other and the Centers for Disease and Control and Prevention to investigat­e further.

Some of them involved “dabbing,” or vaping marijuana products. US media reported several other states were also reporting cases.

Thomas Haupt, a respirator­y disease epidemiolo­gist with Wisconsin’s Department of Health Services, said: “We’re in the process of interviewi­ng all of our patients, to try to find out any commonalit­ies.

“At this particular point, vaping is the only thing that they have in common, but we’re trying to cast a broader net and just make sure that we are not missing something as well.”

The findings have baffled experts, since e-cigarettes have been available in the US since 2006 and scientific research so far suggests they are probably a less toxic alternativ­e to smoking.

Their use among adolescent­s has skyrockete­d in recent years: some 3.6 million middle and high school students used vaping products in 2018, an increase of 1.5 million on the year before, according to the report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. —

 ?? AFP file ?? health risks: a man smokes an e-cigarette at the Vaping Buddha in south san Francisco. Us doctors are investigat­ing the cases of many teens who were hospitalis­ed with lung injuries after vaping. —
AFP file health risks: a man smokes an e-cigarette at the Vaping Buddha in south san Francisco. Us doctors are investigat­ing the cases of many teens who were hospitalis­ed with lung injuries after vaping. —

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