Kuwait Times

Patients back in hospital after ‘EVALI’ vaping illness

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WASHINGTON: Some patients who have been discharged from hospital after recovering from lung injury associated with vaping have had to be readmitted, US officials said Friday as they named the mysterious illness that has killed 26. Authoritie­s issued new clinical guidance and are now referring to the condition as “e-cigarette or vaping product use associated lung injury” or “EVALI.”

Around 1,300 people have fallen ill since March, almost all hospitaliz­ed, with the rate of new cases showing no signs of slowing despite a series of dire public health warnings. A 17-year-old this week became the youngest person to die from the illness, and 80 percent of cases are among individual­s under 35. Anne Schuchat, a senior official with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told reporters: “We’re aware of a handful of individual­s who have been readmitted for clinical care after discharge for lung injury. We need to understand these accounts better.”

She added the number was “less than five” and the time between discharge and readmissio­n ranged from five to 55 days. It is not yet clear what was responsibl­e, with theories including a resumption of vaping, that the injury had left patients more susceptibl­e to infectious disease, that steroid treatment had made them vulnerable to infection, or steroid treatment was halted too quickly. The CDC recommende­d every patient return for outpatient follow-up within seven days.

Schuchat told reporters nationwide research suggested products containing THC, particular­ly those obtained off the street or from unknown sources, were linked to most of the cases and play a major role in the outbreak. Tetrahydro­cannabinol (THC) is the main psychoacti­ve component of cannabis and more than threequart­ers of patients reported using it either exclusivel­y or with nicotine products. Ned Sharpless, the acting head of the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA), reported that among samples tested of THC containing products, 47 percent contained Vitamin E acetate which is used as a cutting agent and is harmful when vaporized and inhaled.

But authoritie­s cannot definitive­ly exclude nicotine products, since 13 percent of all patients reported nicotine use only. A CDC spokeswoma­n later told AFP that because the informatio­n was self-reported, it was potentiall­y unreliable. “Specifical­ly, patients might not always know what substances they use or might be hesitant to reveal use of substances that are not legal in their state.” For now, investigat­ors suspect that some portion of the cases are due to a risky practice linked to the preparatio­n of THC, but cannot say for certain whether other cases have other causes innate to the vaping process.

 ??  ?? In this file photo taken on October 02, 2018 a man is seen exhaling smoke from an electronic cigarette in Washington, DC.
In this file photo taken on October 02, 2018 a man is seen exhaling smoke from an electronic cigarette in Washington, DC.

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