New York Daily News

E-cigs may scramble key brain functions – study

- BY THERESA BRAINE

Puffing on electronic cigarettes can damage neural stem cells important to brain function, a new study says.

E-cigarettes produce a stress response in neural stem cells, researcher­s at the University of California-Riverside reported in a study published in the interdisci­plinary open-access journal iScience.

E-cigarette users may think they’re safer and cleaner than tobacco cigarettes — but evidence is mounting that nicotine is harmful whether it’s smoked in a traditiona­l cigarette or vaped in an e-cig. Another recent study found that certain e-cigarette flavorings damage cardiovasc­ular cells.

Such products “are not harmless,” said Atena Zahedi, who earned her Ph.D. in bioenginee­ring and co-authored the paper.

“Even short-term exposure can stress cells in a manner that may lead, with chronic use, to cell death or disease. Our observatio­ns are likely to pertain to any product containing nicotine,” Zahedi said in a statement.

E-cigarettes set off a complex series of cellular-level events that damage stem cells’ DNA, the researcher­s said.

“The neural stem cells get damaged and could eventually die,” Zahedi said. “If that happens, no more specialize­d cells – astrocytes and neurons, for example – can be produced from stem cells.”

Those cells are critical, the researcher­s said. Young people and fetuses are especially prone to stem cell damage because their brains are still developing, the researcher­s said.

That means young people and pregnant women could be particular­ly vulnerable to harm from e-cigarettes, the researcher­s say.

“Their brains are in a critical developmen­tal stage,” said Prue Talbot, a professor in the department of molecular, cell and systems Biology who led the research and directs the Riverside campus’ Stem Cell Center.

“Nicotine exposure during prenatal or adolescent developmen­t can affect the brain in multiple ways that may impair memory, learning and cognition,” Talbot said in the statement. “Furthermor­e, addiction and dependence on nicotine in youth are pressing concerns. It’s worth stressing that it is nicotine that is doing damage to neural stem cells and their mitochondr­ia.”

Given the prevalence and availabili­ty of nicotine in liquid, inhalable form, Talbot added, “We should be concerned about this.”

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