At Old Town Kettles and Cups in Wentzville, the electronic cigarette business is smoking. Minutes before closing time, several customers
are purchasing battery-powered e-cigarettes and choosing from 80 flavors of
e-liquid, sometimes referred to as 'juice', with different doses of nicotine.
The e-cigarette converts the liquid to vaporized nicotine that's inhaled.
"All you do is add your juice," said store owner
Denise Menckowski, while demonstrating how the e-cigarette works. "This
juice in particular is made of propylene glycol, vegetable glycerin, nicotine,
and some food flavoring. The mixers that we have mix our juice, actually we
don't do it in house. We want it to be in a clean environment, above restaurant
quality, and they're also guys who talk to the FDA, so that's pretty cool, so
they're putting standards in place to make sure this nicotine is correct."
Greg Hohimer smoked cigarettes for 45 years. "I had
asthma, bronchitis, emphysema. I was on four medications."
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Hohimer says after trying unsuccessfully to kick the tobacco
habit at least 30 times, he started vaping e-cigarettes. "A year after
quitting smoking and starting vaping, I'm off all my lung medications."
Fans of e-cigarettes, also known as vapers, say they're less
harmful than real cigarettes and are effective helping smokers quit tobacco.
Critics say too little is known about the safety of electronic cigarettes
because they're not regulated. Michelle Bernth handles communications for the
American Lung Association St. Louis, which opposes e-cigarettes.
"Right now there's a lot of misinformation about
electronic cigarettes," said Bernth. "The first is that they're not
harmful to your health which is not true because nicotine which we know is
harmful to your health. They also contain chemicals we don't fully understand.
Right now they're not being regulated by the FDA. And so we want to learn more
about what goes on with them before we can understand how harmful or not
harmful they are to people."
Hohimer says he enjoys e-cigarettes and has no plans to stop
smoking, even though there's little information about long-term use. "What
I got away from was very harmful," said Hohimer. "If there are some
long-term problems, there's no way it's going to be nearly as much as when I
was smoking."
The American Cancer Society, like the American Lung
Association, opposes e-cigarettes. "As long as you're inhaling nicotine
and other toxic chemicals into your lungs, you're still smoking," said
Michelle Bernth.
Concern about the safety of e-cigarettes is not hurting
sales, which could reach $1 billion this year, according to UBS, a global
financial services firm.
Article Credit: http://www.ksdk.com

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