The Guardian (USA)

US health officials urge people to stop vaping as third death reported

- Associated Press

US health officials warned people not to vape until they determine the cause of a severe respirator­y illness, which has killed at least three people and hospitaliz­ed many more.

Officials are investigat­ing more than 450 possible cases of a severe breathing illness among otherwise “healthy young people”, they said on Friday. Possible cases have been identified across 33 states and one US territory.

Symptoms of the illness include vomiting, nausea, shortness of breath, coughing and chest pain. All confirmed cases appear to have a kind of non-infectious pneumonia, called lipoid pneumonia, developed when oil is inhaled.

In all confirmed cases, patients vaped either nicotine or the marijuana constituen­t THC in the last 90 days. An estimated 9 million adults and 3.6 million US teenagers vape, including 20% of high school students.

“One of the things found in common was all patients were using vaped substances in e-cigarettes,” said Dr Daniel Fox of WakeMed Health and Hospitals in North Carolina, where several cases were identified. “They all had abnormal chest x-rays and developed a need for a lot of oxygen.”

Doctors and researcher­s are still working to determine whether the phenomenon is new, or newly recog

nized, and how the cases may be connected. So far, no single device, constituen­t or product has been common across all cases.

They also have not determined the best way to treat the condition. In nearly all cases, the patients were started on antibiotic­s and many later on steroids, but it is not clear whether these treatments helped patients improve.

Officials asked doctors to collect samples in cases where they suspect a patient could have the ailment. The samples are then sent to the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA).

The FDA is testing more than 120 samples for a “broad range of chemicals”, including “nicotine, THC, cannabinoi­ds, cutting agent or diluents, additives, pesticides, opioids, poisons and toxins”, said Mitch Zeller, director of the Center for Tobacco Products at the FDA.

“FDA is going to leave no stone unturned in following any potential leads,” said Zeller.

The illnesses have all been reported this year, and the number has been growing quickly in the last month as more and more states have begun investigat­ions. A week ago, US officials pegged the number at 215 possible cases in 25 states. The most recent death due to the illness was in Indiana.

“We’re all wondering if this is new or just newly recognized,” Dr Dana Meaney-Delman of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) told reporters on Friday.

Also on Friday, the New England Journal of Medicine released a series of articles which give medical details about cases reported in Illinois, Wisconsin and Utah. An article on 53 illnesses in Illinois and Wisconsin noted nearly one-fifth of cases were people who said they vaped nicotine alone, and nothing containing marijuana oils.

For that reason, doctors and health officials are continuing to suggest people stay away from all vaping products until the investigat­ion establishe­s exactly what is at the root of the illnesses.

 ??  ?? Many of the sickened – but not all – were people who had been vaping THC, the chemical that gives marijuana its high. Photograph: Alastair Pike/AFP/Getty Images
Many of the sickened – but not all – were people who had been vaping THC, the chemical that gives marijuana its high. Photograph: Alastair Pike/AFP/Getty Images

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