- As New York considers becoming the first state to ban
electronic cigarettes, debate surrounds the devices and their safety.
- Critics worry that e-cigarettes will attract kids and
create a new generation of nicotine addicts.
- The devices, which are tobacco-free, may be a safer
alternative to cigarettes, say advocates.
Electronic cigarettes are handheld nicotine-delivery devices
that, despite a devoted following, are currently swirling in controversy.
New York is pushing to become the first state to ban the
devices, which so far remain unregulated and mostly unstudied. With cutesy
colors, fruity flavors, clever designs and other options, e-cigarettes may hold
too much appeal for young people, critics warn, offering an easy gateway to
nicotine addiction.
But those criticisms clash with equally strong arguments for
the value of e-cigarettes. The devices, which are tobacco-free, may be a safer
alternative to cigarettes, say advocates, who point to testimonials from
thousands of smokers who say they have used e-cigarettes to help them quit.
As the U.S. Food and Drug Administration struggles to gain
regulatory control, and as safety studies remain works in progress, the debate
continues.
"There really are a lot of unknowns with respect to
health," said Prue Talbot, a toxicologist at the University California,
Riverside. "I don't know of any studies in the literature which are
peer-reviewed. Almost all of the studies have been paid for by the e-cigarette
companies.
"E-cigarettes are often sold as safe, which is probably
not true," Talbot added. "They may not be as dangerous as real
cigarettes, but on the other hand, they could be. We just don't know."
Electronic cigarettes typically use a rechargeable
battery-operated heating element to vaporize the nicotine in a replaceable
cartridge. Nicotine is usually dissolved in propylene glycol, a clear and
colorless liquid that is commonly found in inhalers, cough medicines and other
products.
Some e-cigarettes are made to look like real cigarettes,
cigars or pipes. Others look like pens or USB memory devices. There is no
tobacco involved, and no smoke either. Instead, users do what's called
"vaping." As they inhale, they take in nicotine-filled vapor.
By isolating nicotine, e-cigarettes should carry far fewer
chemical risks than regular cigarettes, said Michael Siegel, a tobacco
researcher at Boston University. Tobacco contains about 5,000 known chemicals,
he said, with as many as 100,000 more that haven't yet been identified.
E-cigarettes eliminate many of those ingredients.
Siegel and a colleague reviewed 16 studies that analyzed the
contents of electronic cigarettes. In a paper just published in the Journal of
Public Health Policy, they reported that levels of certain harmful chemicals
were on par with levels found in nicotine patches and hundreds of times lower
than what's found in cigarettes.
Article Credit: http://news.discovery.com/

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