The Star Malaysia

Vaping as harmful as smoking

New research finds that the amount of nicotine taken in by both methods damages lung cells just the same.

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NEW Australian research has found that whether smokers opt for traditiona­l tobacco cigarettes, e-cigarettes or new heat-not-burn devices, they still risk damaging their lungs.

Carried out by researcher­s at the University of Tasmania and the University of Sydney, along with India’s National Institute of Pharmaceut­ical Education and Research, the new study looked at the effects of the nicotine sources on two types of cells taken from the lungs – epithelial cells and smooth muscle cells.

Epithelial cells are the first line of defence to protect against any foreign particles entering the airways, while smooth muscle cells maintain the structure of the airways.

As smoking can impair the normal functionin­g of the cells, which can lead to respirator­y problems, the researcher­s exposed the cells to different concentrat­ions of traditiona­l tobacco cigarette smoke, e-cigarette vapour and vapour from a heat-not-burn tobacco device.

Unlike an e-cigarette, which heats a solution called an e-liquid, creating a vapour, this newer device heats solid tobacco.

The findings, published in the journal ERJ Open Research, showed that cigarette smoke and heated tobacco vapour were highly toxic to the lung cells at both lower and higher concentrat­ions, with e-cigarette vapour found to be toxic at higher concentrat­ions.

Researcher­s say that these concentrat­ions represent the levels of nicotine found in chronic smokers.

“We observed different levels of cellular toxicity with all forms of exposures in human lung cells.

“What came out clearly was that the newer products were in no way less toxic to cells than convention­al cigarettes or e-cigarette vaping,” commented Dr Sukhwinder Sohal, a leading author on the study.

“Our results suggest that all three are toxic to the cells of our lungs and that these new heated tobacco devices are as harmful as smoking traditiona­l cigarettes.”

In recent years, many smokers have switched from traditiona­l tobacco to the new devices, believing that they are safer than cigarettes, or that they will help them quit smoking altogether.

However, the researcher­s say that the current findings build on existing evidence suggesting that newer electronic nicotine delivery devices may not be a safer substitute for cigarette smoking after all.

“Smoking is the leading cause of preventabl­e death, and with the introducti­on of e-cigarettes in the last decade, the trend of nicotine uptake is not going to slow down in the near future.

“If the current trend continues, tobacco use will cause more than eight million deaths annually by 2030 around the world,” said lead author Dr Pawan Sharma.

“It took us nearly five decades to understand the damaging effects of cigarette smoke and we don’t yet know the long-term impact of using e-cigarettes.

“These devices that heat solid tobacco are relatively new and it will be decades before we will fully understand their effects on human health,” said Dr Sohal.

“What we do know is that damage to these two types of lung cells can destroy lung tissue, leading to fatal diseases such as chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, lung cancer and pneumonia, and can increase the risk of developing asthma, so we should not assume that these devices are a safer option.” – AFP Relaxnews

 ?? — AFP ?? More evidence has been found to suggest that e-cigarettes, as well as the heat-not-burn device, are as harmful to health as regular cigarettes.
— AFP More evidence has been found to suggest that e-cigarettes, as well as the heat-not-burn device, are as harmful to health as regular cigarettes.

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