Contest Time! Mountain Oak Vapors - Nothing But The Facts- CONTEST!

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JoanJ

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Myth: Electronic cigarettes make nicotine readily available to non-smokers.
Fact: Electronic cigarettes are marketed to current smokers, not non-smokers.

Nicotine is widely available in over-the-counter products including tobacco cigarettes and smoking cessation gums and lozenges, and there is no evidence that these products or electronic cigarettes increase the consumption of nicotine by those who do not wish to smoke. In a recent industry study that included a random sample of US electronic cigarette customers, 96% were smokers purchasing the product for personal use, and 4% purchased the product for a friend or relative who smoked.
 

barefootgirl

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FACT : I do not crave e cigs the same way I did cigs. I can go without, if necessary, and not suffer physical withdrawals.

(After 16 months smoke free and now vaping at 6 to 12 mgs I notice I am vaping less for the nicotine and more for the flavors.. Vaporized edibles with no calories = WIN)

Heard great stuff about your e liquids... Thank you for the great contest MOV. :)
 

JoanJ

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Electronic cigarettes help to reduce cigarette smoking

First clinical study on e cigarettes just presented at the International Meeting of SRNT in Antalya


Researchers from the University of Catania (ITALY), presented the results of their study on electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) to the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco in Antalya, Turkey last week. Study results. A report on the clinical trial results, which showed that switching to an e-cigarette may assist smokers to reduce or eliminate cigarette smoking in 55% of cases, will be published soon in BMC Public Health.

“Cigarette smoking is a tough addiction to break,” said Professor Riccardo Polosa, the principal investigator of the study. “Therefore, improved approaches to smoking cessation are necessary. E-cigarettes may prove to be a safe alternative to traditional cigarette smoking. They provide a coping mechanism by replacing some of smoking gestures, to help smokers remain abstinent during their quit attempt or to reduce cigarette consumption.”


E-cigarettes are battery-powered devices that deliver vaporized nicotine without the harmful elements present in tobacco cigarette smoke. Tar, carbon monoxide, particulates and thousands of chemicals created by the process of combustion are the elements in smoke that cause up to 99% of the lung disease, heart attacks, strokes, and cancers associated with smoking.

THE STUDY
The study “Effect of an Electronic Nicotine Delivery Device (e-Cigarette) on Smoking Reduction and Cessation: A Prospective 6-Month Pilot Study” monitored modifications in smoking habits of 40 regular smokers unwilling to quit, with a focus on smoking reduction and abstinence. The study used the CATEGORIA® E-Cigarette. Study participants were invited to attend a total of five study visits in a period of 24 weeks. Product use, number of cigarettes smoked, and exhaled carbon monoxide (eCO) levels were measured at each visit.

THE RESULTS
Thirteen of 40 (32.5%) of the participants sustained a 50% reduction in the number of cigarettes per day (CPD) at week-24, with their median of 25 CPD decreasing to 6 CPD. A sustained 80% reduction was shown in five (12.5%) participants, with their median of 30 CPD decreasing to 3 CPD. Sustained smoking abstinence at week-24 was observed in nine (22.5%) participants, with six of them still using the e-cigarette by the end of the study. Combined sustained 50% reduction and smoking abstinence was shown in 22 (55%) participants, with an overall 88% fall in CPD.

Mouth (20.6%) and throat (32.4%) irritation, and dry cough (32.4%) were common, but diminished substantially by week-24.

Participants’ perception and acceptance of the product was good.

Press Office LIAF – Italian No Smoking Association
 

kecast

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MYTH: Vegetable Glycerin/VG, a component of e-cigarette e-liquid, is harmful to the body when inhaled.

FACT: It has been found that Vegetable Glycerine is hypo-allergenic, which is especially important to vapers who happen to be allergic to propylene glycol which is, of course, the other major ingredient in E-liquids. Studies have also shown that glycerol has very low numbers in other tests concerning the skin, eyes, and upper respiratory system. It does not cause mutation of cells and/or chromosomal/DNA information, and therefore it is considered to be harmless to the reproductive system. In fact all of these studies are fairly short and to the point, calling for no further need of research because Vegetable Glycerine is so unarguably low in health risks. The longest study I’ve been able to find was a 13-week study in which rats were exposed to glycerol inhalation six hours daily and were found to be minimally to mildly harmed in the process. Essentially, some of the rats experienced a little weight gain due to their bodies’ metabolising of the glycerol into sugars. This small risk is even smaller in human beings due to the mere size difference.

Even the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has determined that VG/glycerol meets all of their own criteria to be considered completely safe for humans. Several of the largest pharmaceutical regulating organizations, as well as the pharmaceutical corporations themselves, have labeled VG as harmless. Also, there seems to have been no reported cases of bad manufacturing and/or shipping practices relating to companies that produce glycerol in bulk for distribution. So, all of this just goes further to indicate why more studies have not been done regarding the toxicity and other health risks. That reason, of course, is that the studies that have been done have all found that there is no reason to look further into the issue… even the FDA agrees that VG is harmless whether it’s ingested orally, transdermally, or through inhalation.
 

dolphins35

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Utah Rep. Phil Riesen stated in a hearing for a bill on e-cigarettes, “I've been sitting here contemplating whether or not we should propose banning electronic cigarettes, and I'm hearing a lot of testimony from folks who say that it's helping them stop smoking, and while I'm certainly not an advocate of nicotine or nicotine addiction, if these things are actually being used to help people quit smoking, I don't think we ought to ban them anymore than we should ban Nicorette or patches or anything that is helping people to quit.”
 

JoanJ

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Electronic cigarettes do not damage the heart

Topics: Cardiovascular Disease Prevention - Risk Assessment and Management
Date: 25 Aug 2012
Electronic cigarettes have no acute adverse effects on cardiac function, according to research presented today at an ESC Congress 2012 press conference by Dr Konstantinos Farsalinos from Greece.

Smoking is the most preventable risk factor for cardiac and lung disease and is expected to cause 1 billion deaths during the 21st century. Electronic cigarettes have been marketed in recent years as a safer habit for smokers, with several millions of people already using them worldwide.

Electronic cigarettes simulate the effect of smoking by producing an inhaled vapor. The device consists of a battery, a cartridge containing liquid and a heating element which gets warm and evaporates the liquid. Laboratory analyses of the liquids show that they are less toxic than regular cigarettes. Most studies have found no nitrosamines, but even in studies where nitrosamines were found, the levels detected were 500-1400 times less than the amount present in one tobacco cigarette. This means that electronic cigarettes must be used daily for 4-12 months to get the amount of nitrosamines present in a single tobacco cigarette.

Since heart disease is the main cause of morbidity and mortality in smokers, with 40% of deaths in smokers due to coronary artery disease alone, the research team decided to perform the first clinical study of the acute effects of electronic cigarettes on cardiac function.
They decided to compare their results with the acute effects of regular cigarettes on cardiac function since electronic cigarettes are marketed to smokers only, as an alternative habit.

Previous studies from the research group and several others have shown that acute smoking inhalation produces significant defects in myocardial function. This indicates that subclinical dysfunction is already present in apparently healthy asymptomatic young people who smoke tobacco cigarettes. The goal was to evaluate whether these signs of preclinical disease appear in a similar population after using electronic cigarettes.

The researchers measured myocardial function in 20 healthy young daily smokers aged 25-45 years before and after smoking one tobacco cigarette and 22 daily electronic cigarette users of similar age before and after using the device for 7 minutes.

Experienced users of electronic cigarettes were studied because they use the device more intensively than first-time users. Although both groups were of equal age, users of electronic cigarettes had a 44% higher lifetime tobacco smoking exposure compared to current smokers.

For the electronic cigarettes, a commercially available liquid with a nicotine concentration of 11mg/ml was used (NOBACCO USA Mix). This was tested by an independent toxicology laboratory and found to contain no nitrosamines or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.

Myocardial function was examined using cardiac ultrasound (echocardiography) and hemodynamic measurements (blood pressure and heart rate).

The researchers found that smoking one tobacco cigarette led to significant acute myocardial dysfunction but electronic cigarettes had no acute adverse effects on cardiac function. Smoking a tobacco cigarette had important hemodynamic consequences, with significant increases in systolic and diastolic blood pressure and in heart rate. In contrast, electronic cigarettes produced only a slight elevation in diastolic blood pressure. Dr Farsalinos said: “This is an indication that although nicotine was present in the liquid used (11mg/ml), it is absorbed at a lower rate compared to regular cigarette smoking.”

The echocardiography examination focused on the function of the left ventricle, the part of the heart that receives oxygenated blood from the lungs (filling or diastolic phase) and then delivers the blood to the whole body (pumping or systolic phase). The investigators found significant defects in the diastolic phase of left ventricular function after smoking one cigarette, with four echocardiographic parameters indicating worsening function. In contrast, none of the echocardiographic parameters showed any significant worsening in subjects after using the electronic cigarette. “Diastolic dysfunction is very important because it is usually the first defect that is detected before any clinically-evident cardiac disease develops,” said Dr Farsalinos.


He added: “It is too early to say whether the electronic cigarette is a revolution in tobacco harm reduction but the potential is there. It is the only available product that deals with both the chemical (nicotine delivery) and psychological (inhaling and exhaling ‘smoke’, holding it, etc) addiction to smoking, laboratory analyses indicate that it is significantly less toxic and our study has shown no significant defects in cardiac function after acute use.”

Dr Farsalinos continued: “More clinical studies need to be done before suggesting that this is a revolutionary product. However, considering the extreme hazards associated with cigarette smoking, currently available data suggest that electronic cigarettes are far less harmful and substituting tobacco with electronic cigarettes may be beneficial to health.”

Dr Farsalinos will also present his results during an ESC Congress 2012 scientific session tomorrow.

Contributors:
Konstantinos Farsalinos, MD1, Dimitris Tsiapras, MD1, Stamatis Kyrzopoulos, MD1, and Vassilis Voudris, MD1
1 Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center, Athens, Greece

Authors: Dr Konstantinos Farsalinos (Greece), Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center

ESC Press Office

For background information, please contact the ESC Press Office.
For independent comment on site, please contact Tanya Kenny, +4917610572544
Notes to editor

About the European Society of Cardiology
The European Society of Cardiology (ESC) represents more than 75,000 cardiology professionals across Europe and the Mediterranean. Its mission is to reduce the burden of cardiovascular disease in Europe.

About ESC Congress 2012
ESC Congress 2012 will take place from 25 to 29 August at the Messe München centre in Munich, Germany. Information on the scientific programme is available here. More information on ESC Congress 2012 is available from the ESC Press Office or contact us at press@escardio.org

References This press release accompanies both a presentation and an ESC press conference at the ESC Congress 2012. The press release has been written by the investigator and edited by the ESC and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the European Society of Cardiology.

Refers to session: Tobacco: from early damage to late impact
 
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