Unfortunately we do not get a free ride from ecigs either. At least we are not inhaling the buffet of toxins that comes with traditional cigarettes.
However it appears that in spite of vast amounts of research we still know little regarding all potential cancer vectors in the inhaled plume. Yet this appears to be almost solvable with this protocol.
The take home is to not smoke at all, but if you must, ecigs will be safer and must get safer as our research improves.
Cell Harm Seen in Lab Tests of e-Cigarettes
Released:
29-Dec-2015 2:05 PM EST
http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/645399/?sc=dwhn
Newswise — Adding to growing evidence on the possible health risks
of electronic cigarettes, a lab team at the Veterans Affairs San Diego
Healthcare System tested two products and found they damaged cells in
ways that could lead to cancer. The damage occurred even with
nicotine-free versions of the products.
"Our study strongly
suggests that electronic cigarettes are not as safe as their marketing
makes them appear to the public," wrote the researchers, who published
their findings in the journal Oral Oncology.
The U.S. Food
and Drug Administration does not regulate e-cigarettes like it does
conventional tobacco products. But it has warned of possible health
risks. So far, though, evidence is limited on what exactly e-cigarettes
contain and whether those chemicals are safe, particularly in terms of
cancer.
"There haven't been many good lab studies on the effects
of these products on actual human cells," says Dr. Jessica
Wang-Rodriquez, one of the lead researchers on the new study. She is a
professor of pathology at the University of California, San Diego, and
chief of pathology and laboratory medicine at the San Diego VA. She
specializes in studying head and neck cancer.
Her team created an
extract from the vapor of two popular brands of e-cigarettes and used it
to treat human cells in Petri dishes. Compared with untreated cells,
the treated cells were more likely to show DNA damage and die.
The
exposed cells showed several forms of damage, including DNA strand
breaks. The familiar double helix that makes up DNA has two long strands
of molecules that intertwine. When one or both of these strands break
apart and the cellular repair process doesn't work right, the stage is
set for cancer.
The affected cells were also more likely to launch into apoptosis and necrosis, which lead to cell death.
In
the main part of the experiment, the team used normal epithelial cells,
which line organs, glands, and cavities throughout the body, including
the mouth and lungs.
The scientists tested two types of each
e-cigarette: a nicotine and nicotine-free version. Nicotine is what
makes smoking addictive. There is also some evidence it can damage
cells. The San Diego team found that the nicotine versions caused worse
damage, but even the nicotine-free vapor was enough to alter cells.
"There
have been many studies showing that nicotine can damage cells," says
Wang-Rodriguez. "But we found that other variables can do damage as
well. It's not that the nicotine is completely innocent in the mix, but
it looks like the amount of nicotine that the cells are exposed to by
e-cigarettes is not sufficient by itself to cause these changes. There
must be other components in the e-cigarettes that are doing this damage.
So we may be identifying other carcinogenic components that are
previously undescribed."
She says her team is now trying to sort out those other substances and their specific effects.
Scientists
already know of some troubling chemicals in the products. One is
formaldehyde, a known carcinogen. Using the products at a low voltage
setting may minimize the production of formaldehyde, research suggests.
Another possible culprit is diacetyl, a flavoring agent that has been
linked to lung disease. A Harvard study found it in more than
three-quarters of flavored e-cigarettes and refill liquids, or
"e-juice."
There are nearly 500 brands of e-cigarettes on the
market, in more than 7,000 flavors. So scientists have their work cut
out for them identifying all the potential problems.
"For now, we
were able to at least identify that e-cigarettes on the whole have
something to do with increased cell death," says Wang-Rodriguez. "We
hope to identify the individual components that are contributing to the
effect."
She notes that cells in the lab are not completely
comparable to cells within a living person. The cells lines that
scientists work with have been "immortalized because of certain cell
changes," she says. So it could be that e-cigarette vapor has different
effects than those seen in the lab.
Also, her team didn't seek to mimic the actual dose of vapor that an e-cigarette user would get.
"In
this particular study, it was similar to someone smoking continuously
for hours on end, so it's a higher amount than would normally be
delivered," she says. "What we're looking at now is to dose-control
these. We want to know at what dose it causes that critical switch-over
to where we see the damage."
The overarching question is whether
the battery-operated products are really any safer than the conventional
tobacco cigarettes they are designed to replace.
Wang-Rodriquez doesn't think they are.
"Based on the evidence to date," she says, "I believe they are no better than smoking regular cigarettes."
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