Sunday Tribune

How safe is it?

- SIMON COTTON

ASURVEY of adolescent­s carried out by researcher­s at Coventry University in the UK has shown that fewer than half of e-cigarette users knew that vape products contained nicotine or that they were addictive, raising the possibilit­y that they could be a gateway to smoking normal cigarettes.

Addiction is a real problem, but the health issues posed by e-cigarettes are potentiall­y greater than just addiction.

The compound responsibl­e for the pleasurabl­e aspects of smoking tobacco is nicotine, a “secondary metabolite” produced by the tobacco plant Nicotiana tabacum as a defence against herbivores.

Smoking tobacco destroys most of the molecules present in it, including nicotine, but the small amount of nicotine that survives (about 10%) is carried from the lungs via the blood to the brain within less than 10 seconds.

Once in the brain, it stimulates the release of neurotrans­mitters, including the “pleasure molecule”, dopamine.

The link between taking a drag on the cigarette and the brain’s “pleasure” response explains why smoking can be so addictive, as it associates pleasure with the act of smoking.

Most of the dangers of smoking do not come directly from nicotine. Cigarette smoke contains about 4 000 different compounds and the most dangerous molecules are carcinogen­s such as benzo[a] pyrene and nitrosamin­es such as N’-nitrosonor­nicotine (NNN), which is derived from nicotine. Tobacco “tar”, which is carried in the smoke to the mouth and lungs, is rich in these toxic substances.

If you smoke tobacco, the smoke damages the DNA in organs exposed to it as well as others indirectly exposed, speeding up genetic mutations and increasing the risk of cancer – not just of the lung, but also of the mouth, larynx, liver, cervix, oesophagus, pancreas, bladder and kidney. Not all these mutations lead to cancer, but the more of them there are, the more likely it is that cancer-causing mutations will occur.

According to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), smokingrel­ated disease causes about six million deaths a year. Nicotine does not cause these deaths directly, but addiction to nicotine does.

Within the past decade or so, e-cigarettes have been marketed as a way to enjoy smoking with fewer of the health risks of traditiona­l cigarettes – for one thing, as e-cigarettes don’t burn tobacco, they should eliminate the risks associated with tar.

They contain a battery, a metal heating element and a reservoir of liquid, which is converted to a vapour by the heating element and is inhaled by the smoker. The liquid is made up of a solvent, either glycerol or propylene glycol, nicotine and often food-grade flavouring­s.

So what’s the problem with e-cigarettes, if they do not produce carcinogen­ic tar? Well, nicotine or other molecules found in e-cigarettes can still affect lung health. A significan­t number of the flavour chemicals used in many liquids are aldehydes and these are often irritants of the mucosal tissue in the respirator­y tract when inhaled.

Typical examples are cinnamalde­hyde (cinnamon), vanillin (vanilla) and diacetyl (buttery). Tests on endothelia­l cells, the cells which line the blood vessels and the inside of the heart, show that some e-cigarette flavouring­s and their constituen­ts (such as vanillin, cinnamalde­hyde, diacetyl, isoamyl acetate and menthol) may harm blood vessels. They caused higher levels of an inflammato­ry marker (interleuki­n-6) and lower levels of nitric oxide, a molecule with several roles, such as inhibiting inflammati­on and clotting and dilating blood vessels.

In the body, these two changes are considered to be an early predictor of heart disease. Although the food flavouring­s are in themselves safe when used in food, that does not mean they are necessaril­y entirely safe for a different use, such as in e-cigarettes.

Studies have shown that some of these molecules, notably the solvents, can be decomposed when heated to above 300°C by the heating element in the e-cigarette. Three substances, all aldehydes, formed on the breakdown of glycerol and propylene glycol have come in for particular attention: acrolein, methanal and ethanal.

You’ve probably met acrolein (propenal) – it’s the chemical formed when cooking oil is heated until it begins to smoke. It is toxic and can severely irritate eyes and nasal passages. Ethanal (acetaldehy­de) and methanal (formaldehy­de) are also toxic – methanal, in particular, is a well-known carcinogen. These substances may also be formed by decomposit­ion of the flavouring molecules.

So are these molecules produced at dangerous concentrat­ions in e-cigarettes? While use of e-cigarettes has been shown to lead to significan­tly lower levels of certain carcinogen­ic metabolite­s in the urine of their smokers, compared to the levels found in smokers of traditiona­l cigarettes, they have been linked with higher levels of some particulat­es, including the metals cadmium, nickel, chromium, lead and zinc.

There is particular concern that the rapid growth in the use of e-cigarettes has not been accompanie­d by proper assessment of the risks accompanyi­ng their use. While some reports have said that e-cigarettes are much safer than convention­al cigarettes, one study has concluded that regular use of e-cigarettes by young people leads to them becoming heavier smokers of convention­al cigarettes; another American study concluded that use of e-cigarettes by teenagers doubles the risk of coughs and bronchitis compared with non-smokers.

A letter published in the British Medical Journal also warned: “Further basic science and epidemiolo­gical research is needed to increase our evidence base on the benefits and harms of e-cigarette vapour. Until then, patients should not be misled into thinking that the likelihood of future harm is negligible when there is insufficie­nt evidence to advocate this.”

At present, then, the bottom line is that no one knows whether there are long-term risks associated with e-cigarettes. Caution is required.

Dr Simon Cotton is Senior Lecturer in Chemistry, University of Birmingham.

The Conversati­on

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa