It recommends that people “consider refraining from using e-cigarette or vaping products” while the lung injury investigation is ongoing, “particularly those containing THC.” If you don’t currently vape, it also gently suggests that this isn’t the time to pick it up. However,...
Research showed that all the patients had Vitamin E Acetate in their lungs5and many had THC in their lungs5and these are assumed to be part of the cause. In the US Vitamin E Acetate has been removed from some products and there has been a decline in cases19. Chemicals in Vaping liquid...
As smoking’s popularity plummets, vaping is on the rise. People have turned to e-cigarettes and other products to get a fix of nicotine, THC, and other flavored vapor. For companies like Juul, the industry is booming, and regulators at groups like the F
One interesting new development: the CDC notes that out of 514 of the cases, 77% of the patients affected used vaping materials containing THC within the past 30 days of coming down with symptoms. The CDC notified U.S. healthcare systems and clinicians about the illnesses and what to watch...
Vape liquids without THC are not safe either. Even those without nicotine can be quite dangerous. A University of North Carolina study (2016) found the two primary ingredients in e-cigarettes—propylene glycol and vegetable glycerin were health risks. Another study showed e-cigarettes produce danger...
Vaping THC and Addiction Treatment at Alternative to Meds Center Vaping Growing in Popularity The harmful effects of vaping are still relatively unknown to most, but research is ongoing to understand more. Clearly, vaping is a growing fad that has become popularized especially among the you...
Vaping liquid contains nicotine, flavoring and other chemicals, but not tobacco. Some users also vape synthetic drugs or THC, the high-inducing ingredient in marijuana. How vaping may affect your vision A small-scale study published in September 2019 in the journal Optometry and Vision Science sug...
deaths. This condition has been predominantly linked to the modification of vaping devices or the use of black market e-liquids, especially those containing THC. The CDC has identified vitamin E acetate, a thickening agent used in THC vaping products, as a chemical of concern related to EVALI....
of the deaths and illnesses were caused not by e-cigarettes but rather by sketchy black-market THC products. But in the public interest — and in the pursuit of a policy that seems to be driven more abstinence than harm reduction — state and city governments and some state health department...
And there can be many other kinds of chemicals in the liquids people vape. People have used vaping devices to vape other substances, including THC. There are no regulations yet on what the e-liquids contain, and there could be contaminants. ...