Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Vaping may cause heart failure, strokes

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Vaping might not be as safe as we once thought, especially when it comes to the health of our heart. Research has warned that people who smoke e-cigarettes are more likely to suffer from conditions including heart disease and stroke.

As of 2021, 4,5 percent of adults used e-cigarettes in the US, according to the Centre for Disease ConUS trol and Prevention.

Vaping is particular­ly prevalent among young people, with roughly one in seven high school students using e-cigarettes, according to the Food and Drug US Administra­tion.

While vaping is viewed as a safer alternativ­e to smoking tobacco, previous studies have associated e-cigarette use with an increased risk for lung disease, asthma, damaged blood vessels and heart disease, particular­ly among those with pre-existing health conditions.

Now, a study led by MedStar Health in Baltimore has shown that e-cigarette users may be 19 percent more likely to develop heart failure compared to those who have never vaped.

“More and more studies are linking e-cigarettes to harmful effects and finding that it might not be as safe as previously thought,”Yakubu Bene-Alhasan, a resident physician at MedStar Health in Baltimore and the study’s lead author, said.

“The difference we saw was substantia­l. It’s worth considerin­g the consequenc­es to your health, especially with regard to heart health.”

Between 2011 and 2015, the use of e-cigarettes in the spiked by 900 percent. The

US University of Kansas provide an insight into the potential health implicatio­ns of vaping and specifical­ly the potential risk of stroke.

The researcher­s studied 2016 data from the Behavioura­l Risk Factor Surveillan­ce System survey, carried out each year by the

Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

Over 66,795 respondent­s used e-cigarettes regularly, while 343,856 had never used the devices. They also took into account informatio­n on the age and sex of participan­ts, whether they smoked, had diabetes, how much they exercised and their - body mass index.

BMI

A fifth of respondent­s who used e- cigarettes were younger on average compared with nonuser. Vape users had higher chance of suffering from a stroke, angina and coronary heart disease, according to the study.

Dr Paul Ndunda, author and assistant professor in the School of Medicine at the University of Kansas in Wichita, told Newsweek that the study is the first to show an associatio­n between e-cigarette use and stroke.

It is also one of the largest studies to show an associatio­n between e-cigarette use and heart disease, he said.

“This research calls for well designed, large, long-term population studies to assess whether e-cigarettes cause stroke and cardiovasc­ular disease,” he said.

Addressing the potential harms of vaping more generally, Ndunda said there is still a lot that we don’t know about health effects of e-cigarettes.

The effects of nicotine on atheroscle­rosis (where plaque builds up inside your arteries) are also already well investigat­ed.

Dr Aaron Scott of the Institute of Inflammati­on and Ageing at the University of Birmingham in the UK, who was not involved in the study, explained to Newsweek.

“In terms of cardiovasc­ular damage, the nicotine in e-cigarettes may, in the long run, prove to have similar effects to smoking traditiona­l cigarettes, but until long term sequential data is obtained it remains speculatio­n.”

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