Electronic cigarettes and cigars
are billed as a safer way to get a nicotine high, but a Florida man learned
just how dangerous they can be this week. One of the devices exploded in his
mouth, ripping out part of his tongue and several teeth while badly burning his
face.
"He is very, very lucky,"
Fire Chief Joseph Miller of the North Bay Fire Control District told The Times.
The man, identified as Tom Holloway, 57, was taken to a local hospital for
treatment Wednesday, then transported to an Alabama hospital that specializes
in burns. He has since been released. "It could have been a lot
worse," Miller added.
Emergency responders said the
device that Holloway was holding in his mouth acted like "a bottle
rocket." Holloway was in his home office at the time, and some carpet and
chair cushions also burned.
Electronic cigarettes and
cigars
-- commonly called e-cigarettes
and
e-cigars -- are all the rage even though their safety is hotly debated.
They use a nicotine cartridge and a battery. The battery creates an electrical
charge that releases the nicotine vapor. The user inhales that familiar shot of
nicotine,
without the smoke.
Until now, controversy has largely
centered on federal regulatory issues and whether consumers are being misled by
a device that some say could actually be more toxic than regular cigarettes
because of the secondary chemicals used. But this week's explosion will
obviously raise more immediate safety questions.
As you might imagine, the incident
-- and ensuing publicity -- isn't good P.R. for the burgeoning industry of
smokeless cigarettes and cigars.
Thomas Kiklas, co-founder of the
Tobacco Vapor Electronic Cigarette Assn. told The Times that he believes the
device that Holloway used was not the commonly sold kind, but a specially
modified device designed to give the user a turbo-charged blast of nicotine.
(He likened it to the difference between a push lawn mower and a
gasoline-charged lawnmower.) He said on his site that it is too soon to jump to
any conclusion about possible product failure.
Miller, the Niceville, Fla.-based
fire chief, said he'd never heard of the device before, but assumes that it was
a one-time fluke. "When I heard 'electronic cigarette,' I said, 'What in
the heck is that?' "The injured man has since called to
thank the emergency responders for their quick action. "He was very, very
thankful."
Article Credit: http://www.latimes.com
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