Research identifies protein responsible for increasing inflammation and oxidative stress
Research identifies protein responsible for increasing inflammation and oxidative stress
A new study has identified a protein that nicotine-free vape fluid increases in the lung, causing damage including oxidative stress, inflammation and breakdown of the blood vessels.
The research, published in the journal Microvascular Research demonstrates a range of damaging pathways when an in vitro model of the human lung was exposed to a common brand of nicotine-free e-cigarette.
E-cigarettes have become increasingly popular in recent years and are often seen as harmless alternatives to cigarette smoking. It is estimated that there are almost five million ‘vapers’ in the UK, compared to around 700,000 in 2012.
Who would've thought... I wonder how vapes compare to living next to a main road, and if the government will ban ICE cars and air pollution if they're just as damaging to our lungs?
It is honestly really frustrating to see the issue of relative harm just get flat out ignored. "Vaping is bad" - you never see it compared in any sensible way to alcohol, cigarettes, formaldehyde from carpets - what have you (all of which are more or less bad). "Even drinking water can harm the body" is about as useful a statement. This is so tiresome - we're not children.
I really wish these articles would be more clear about what kind of vaping they are talking about. Vaping weed, for example, likely has a different chemical composition but might pose similar or very different risks that the article never acknowledges.
Weed vapes are typically just extracts from the cannabis plant, so their chemical composition should be completely different from the liquids used in nicotine vapes.
As another commentor mentioned, it would be great for these studies to include the relative harm to for example smoking cigarettes or as you mentioned vaping cannabis. Yes it is common sense anything but air in the lungs is bad, but how harmful?
Three vapes, all watermelon flavour, were purchased from an online retailer and contained different concentrations of nicotine: 0mg, 10mg and 20mg in a 2ml solution
Where the fuck can I buy 2ml of 20mg liquid? Standard these days since the dawn of mods is 3mg or 6mg, back around 2012ish you could get 3mg, 6mg, 12mg, 18mg, or 24mg, 10 or 20mg has never been a standard. On top of that the smallest bottle I've seen sold is 5ml testers, who the fuck sells 2ml?!
Even salt nic, it's usually 25-50mg. 20mg salt nic would make sense but where the dick do I buy a 2ml bottle? That's barely a bottle at that point it's a damn vial, nobody sells that shit. Salt nic bottles are usuall all 30ml, never seen a 5ml, 60ml, or 120ml.
I'm gonna need this study to link me to the online retailer, because frankly I'm not sure I believe them.
Yea anything other that clean air like you find deep in the forests and prairies is bad for your lungs. Hardly news. Anything is better than American cigarettes though
the nicotine found in most vapes now days are the newer synthetic variety
after talking to the lab responsible we were told the main difference between synthetic and real is that the synthetic does not cause cancer
another difference is the real nicotine derived from the tobacco plant is usually sourced from India just like your kitchen spices like vanilla and is prone to contamination from ground pollution like heavy metals
synthetic nicotine solves several problems including reducing the strain on the planet by using less resources than required for growing large crops of tobacco
combine that with green chemistry which uses no heavy metals for a catalyst and you have a clean product
now onto flavorings
some such as isoamyl acetate for banana flavor are not very harmful to vape and is even used to test breathing equipment
extensive studies some on a global scale have been done to show the varying degrees of toxicity to nontoxicity on the various flavors
some flavorings are also good on the environment not only because of green chemistry but also with the newer technologies of reclaiming atoms and molecules from food waste
there is lab on the east coast of the US doing just that and making chemicals some for flavoring such as isoamyl acetate which has multiple applications
articles like this are deadest on turning back the clock on good science and good health