The Peterborough Examiner

‘Culprit’ identified in vaping illnesses

New CDC report calls vitamin E acetate a potential toxin of concern

- DENISE GRADY THE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

Vitamin E acetate, an ingredient added to THC-based products, has been identified as a “very strong culprit” in the vaping-related lung injuries that have sickened 2,051 people and killed 39, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday.

But the agency left open the possibilit­y that other chemicals or toxins could also be causing the severe respirator­y ailments.

The report is based on finding the vitamin compound in fluid samples taken from the lungs of 29 patients who had the lung disease.

“For the first time, we have detected a potential toxin of concern, vitamin E acetate, from biological samples from patients,” with lung damage linked to vaping, Dr. Anne Schuchat, principal deputy director of the CDC, said at a news briefing. The samples, she said, “provided evidence of vitamin E acetate at the primary site of injury in the lungs.”

Samples taken from the patients were also tested for plant oils, petroleum distillate­s like mineral oil and other potentiall­y harmful substances, which were “notably not detected,” the CDC said. The findings are being published in Friday’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

Many of the products used by those who became ill were illicitly obtained, public health experts have said, by patients who bought them from friends or on the street. Vaping oils typically include other additives, solvents and flavour enhancers. Vitamin E acetate is sometimes added to dilute the THC to increase profits or as a thickening agent.

Health investigat­ors have said since nearly the beginning of the outbreak in mid-August that some ingredient­s, including vitamin E acetate, could be responsibl­e for some of the lung illness cases.

State health officials in New York had first identified vitamin E acetate from several samples collected in August that were analyzed by the Wadsworth Center lab.

 ?? NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? These THC-based vaping products contain vitamin E acetate, an ingredient identified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as a chemical of concern in vaping-related injuries.
NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH THE NEW YORK TIMES These THC-based vaping products contain vitamin E acetate, an ingredient identified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as a chemical of concern in vaping-related injuries.

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