From CNN.com Today/Eissenberg study with feedback

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teissenb

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I certainly did suggest that, based on the results of the study, craving reduction reported by e-cig users may have a non-pharmacologic component. And, to be honest, I don't see anything controversial or wrong about that. In fact, denicotinized tobacco cigarettes also suppress craving and other abstinence symptoms.

I also stated (accurately) that, if labeled correctly, bottles of e-liquid can contain over 500 mg (a 30 ml bottle of 36mg/ml nicotine liquid contains 1080 mg nicotine, and 50 mg IS the approximate lethal dose).

I think the reviewer may have confused my concern about dripping. My primary concern is the potential for skin/lip contact with a quantity of the liquid (rather than the effects of inhaling the vapor from one drop). Well, that and kids finding the bottles and ingesting the contents...
 

Heed

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I think the reviewer may have confused my concern about dripping. My primary concern is the potential for skin/lip contact with a quantity of the liquid (rather than the effects of inhaling the vapor from one drop). Well, that and kids finding the bottles and ingesting the contents...

Right, so not really dripping but the fact that you can buy bottles of eliquid. The same risk exists if you are refilling cartridges.
 
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teissenb

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I'm torn on that point. As has been discussed elsewhere, people can BUY all sorts of poisons (at the hardware store, for example). The problem isn't the ability to buy nicotine in potentially dangerous quantities. The problem arises when the nicotine is found in a sweet and nice smelling liquid form that is easily accessible (i.e., over the internet) and not always labeled or packaged in a manner that is consistent with the potential lethality of the contents. Does that make sense?

The dripping itself, if we assume everything handled securely, is not the concern. If it caused acute nicotine intoxication, there would not be so many successful reports/descriptions of it.

Yes, refilling and also mixing new flavors (that I have seen on YouTube). Any opportunity to come in physical contact with high dose nicotine is alarming; I would not do it without gloves and a mask. As a graduate student, I once saw a rat who had been injected with more nicotine than was intended. It was extremely unpleasant for me, and I think for him too.
 
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curiousJan

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I certainly did suggest that, based on the results of the study, craving reduction reported by e-cig users may have a non-pharmacologic component. And, to be honest, I don't see anything controversial or wrong about that. In fact, denicotinized tobacco cigarettes also suppress craving and other abstinence symptoms.

Which supports the theory that the visible smoke/vapor is part of the addiction/dependence. Nothing wrong here, imho.

I also stated (accurately) that, if labeled correctly, bottles of e-liquid can contain over 500 mg (a 30 ml bottle of 36mg/ml nicotine liquid contains 1080 mg nicotine, and 50 mg IS the approximate lethal dose).

I think the reviewer may have confused my concern about dripping. My primary concern is the potential for skin/lip contact with a quantity of the liquid (rather than the effects of inhaling the vapor from one drop). Well, that and kids finding the bottles and ingesting the contents...

Rough estimates are that there are ~20 drops in a mL ... resulting in ~.5mg per drop. The partial drop or two that touch my lips and skin per day may be of concern to you, but it isn't to me. Granted if I've flooded my atty and am fighting to get it back to a better functioning state, yes, I do get liquid on me ... and it does get absorbed, because when I've flooded my atty is generally when I get into that borderline od state.

Kids eat cigarettes too. Please don't misunderstand that statement ... my intent is not to minimize the very real danger that exists, only to put it into perspective. I don't think any reasonable poster to this forum will argue against the fact that nic-liquids need to be guarded just as other potentially toxic household substances. The bottles need to be sealed, labeled, child-proofed, and restricted from sale to minors. JQ Public will not get much resistance to this idea ... the resistance to regulation is much more related to paying a luxary tax on something that is very much not a luxary to those dependent upon it.

Jan
 
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slybootz

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The study is a complete nonsense....
Please read more into the study as well as this thread. Many of your(our), concerns have been addressed here in responses from Dr. E, the doctor who performed the study.

Regarding funding:

At the risk of being pilloried all over again, the difference between e-cig industry funding a study now and big pharma funding a study now is that e-cig industry is not subject to regulation and big pharma is.

When pharma commissions a study -- say an abuse liability study like we discussed earlier -- they provide support to ensure that it is conducted under exceedingly stringent review procedures because they know FDA is going to scrutinize (or at least has the option of scrutinizing) every element of that study, from the first screening form to the final analysis. I've conducted pharma-sponsored studies in my lab (not related to nicotine) and I can tell you that the level of paperwork and data review is quadruple any of my NIH-funded studies. We must use complicated hand-entered "case report forms" for any measure taken (sometimes signed or initialed by the study participant), we have independently contracted study monitors in the lab daily or weekly to check all study procedures/records for completeness, and any missing form or value becomes a "protocol violation" that requires additional paperwork to document what happened and why. Once the data are collected, there is a comprehensive review to ensure that the case report forms match the computer-entered data, then the computer entered data are shipped somewhere for independent data entry and "database lock". Etc. etc. etc. All of these steps are taken at *great cost* by the pharma sponsor in part because they know that the entire study is looked at as potentially biased. So they have all these safeguards to minimize any chance of bias. There is an entire industry (the contract research organizations, or CROs) that thrives on running these type of studies.

I'm not saying bias doesn't happen, of course. I will say that bias is very difficult to introduce into the screening, data collection, and data analysis phases of a pharma study (interpretation of the analysis results is a different issue and requires other controls). I will also say that, without regulation of industry X, industry X is not going to pay the substantial additional costs of running a study under these extraordinary conditions that are used to minimize bias in screening, data collection, and data analysis (i.e., a 250,000 dollar study becomes a 1 million dollar study). Thus, when industry X sponsors a study on their own products, all of us have an obligation to be skeptical (and I have no objection to a healthy skepticism of big pharma either).

I hope this response helps a little....

Great info Dr. E!

I've always argued that most of the nicotine one gets is from lip and other skin contact. [...] The liquid nicotine is VERY absorbable through the skin, and I still think filling the carts which results in small amounts of juice on the skin, and overflow on the lips from a fresh cart is the primary way nicotine gets in your system. Having said that, your mind will quickly associate the nicotine in your system with the vapor you see. So, it's just like smoking in the end. We should all probably just wear a nicotine patch and vape 0mg liquid. It would be exactly the same.

I disagree with this statement. While we all can agree that nicotine is very absorb-able through skin contact, I don't think this is the only reason PV users are getting nicotine. I direct drip, and haven't had any overflow onto my lips since my first week of using a PV. I use gloves when making my e-liquids, and never get liquid on my hands. Forum members' studies have already shown that there is definitely sufficient nicotine in the vapor that PVs produce.

I'm torn on that point. As has been discussed elsewhere, people can BUY all sorts of poisons (at the hardware store, for example). The problem isn't the ability to buy nicotine in potentially dangerous quantities. The problem arises when the nicotine is found in a sweet and nice smelling liquid form that is easily accessible (i.e., over the internet) and not always labeled or packaged in a manner that is consistent with the potential lethality of the contents. Does that make sense?

The dripping itself, if we assume everything handled securely, is not the concern. If it caused acute nicotine intoxication, there would not be so many successful reports/descriptions of it.

Yes, refilling and also mixing new flavors (that I have seen on YouTube). Any opportunity to come in physical contact with high dose nicotine is alarming; I would not do it without gloves and a mask. As a graduate student, I once saw a rat who had been injected with more nicotine than was intended. It was extremely unpleasant for me, and I think for him too.

Thanks for the clarification on that Dr. E! Very well said.

I completely agree that there is concern to be had with the proper labeling on nicotine liquids. Some of my online-purchased e-liquids have no labeling other than flavor and strength. Others have labels that list ingredients, have warning labels saying very toxic, and say 'keep out of reach of children'. Unfortunately, there are a lot of companies that do not label e-liquids, which is definitely a concern. I hope any future FDA decisions on e-liquid will address regulations for proper labeling.

I make my own e-liquids, like some others on this forum. I definitely never handle any nicotine solution without gloves, goggles, and a face mask. I make sure that I only do my mixing in a clean room of my house, designated only for e-liquid mixing. I make sure there are no spills, and if a drop of liquid does spill onto my mixing surface, it is cleaned properly. I don't have children, but if I did I would definitely make sure this room has several locks on the door. I don't have pets, but the same concern would be for them. It is a growing concern of mine that many people who become enamored with PVs start mixing their own liquids, and I hope they all know how toxic the nicotine is. It's concerning to me that you can purchase 125mg/ml nicotine liquid online(which is what I use as a base) without any age verification or FDA knowledge.

I have a bottle of 60mg/ml liquid for mixing that says
"Caution-Use At Own Risk; Contains Distilled Water, Nicotine, PG; Keep away from children and pets; If ingested call poison control 1-800-222-1222

I also have a bottle of 36mg/ml liquid that only says
Flavorless 36mg e-liquid

I think we can all agree that proper labeling of high strength nicotine liquids needs to be addressed by the FDA in some manner. Hopefully, the regulations that are put in place will not affect our ability to continue mixing safely as a hobby, but ensure that these nicotine liquids are properly labeled as to their ingredients, their strength, their toxicity, etc. There is just too much inconsistency in the varying labels right now with no regulations on how they need to be labeled.
 

anim8r

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I seriously hope that's a misquote/misinterpretation because that doesn't reflect the reality of dripping in the slightest.

Also, we've now gone from no nicotine to overdose levels? C'mon.

Just when I think it can't get any crazier, now I'm going to hear about overdosing and about my carrying of toxic liquids on my person :mad:

Can't wait until TSA gets wind of all of us carrying toxic uncontrolled poisons onto planes.

And from the same guy that states, you might as well suck an unlit cigarette.

You can't make this stuff up.
 

anim8r

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Please read more into the study as well as this thread. Many of your(our), concerns have been addressed here in responses from Dr. E, the doctor who performed the study.



Great info Dr. E!



I disagree with this statement. While we all can agree that nicotine is very absorb-able through skin contact, I don't think this is the only reason PV users are getting nicotine. I direct drip, and haven't had any overflow onto my lips since my first week of using a PV. I use gloves when making my e-liquids, and never get liquid on my hands. Forum members' studies have already shown that there is definitely sufficient nicotine in the vapor that PVs produce.



Thanks for the clarification on that Dr. E! Very well said.

I completely agree that there is concern to be had with the proper labeling on nicotine liquids. Some of my online-purchased e-liquids have no labeling other than flavor and strength. Others have labels that list ingredients, have warning labels saying very toxic, and say 'keep out of reach of children'. Unfortunately, there are a lot of companies that do not label e-liquids, which is definitely a concern. I hope any future FDA decisions on e-liquid will address regulations for proper labeling.

I make my own e-liquids, like some others on this forum. I definitely never handle any nicotine solution without gloves, goggles, and a face mask. I make sure that I only do my mixing in a clean room of my house, designated only for e-liquid mixing. I make sure there are no spills, and if a drop of liquid does spill onto my mixing surface, it is cleaned properly. I don't have children, but if I did I would definitely make sure this room has several locks on the door. I don't have pets, but the same concern would be for them. It is a growing concern of mine that many people who become enamored with PVs start mixing their own liquids, and I hope they all know how toxic the nicotine is. It's concerning to me that you can purchase 125mg/ml nicotine liquid online(which is what I use as a base) without any age verification or FDA knowledge.

I have a bottle of 60mg/ml liquid for mixing that says

I also have a bottle of 36mg/ml liquid that only says

I think we can all agree that proper labeling of high strength nicotine liquids needs to be addressed by the FDA in some manner. Hopefully, the regulations that are put in place will not affect our ability to continue mixing safely as a hobby, but ensure that these nicotine liquids are properly labeled as to their ingredients, their strength, their toxicity, etc. There is just too much inconsistency in the varying labels right now with no regulations on how they need to be labeled.


But...

Have you ever put a single drop of e-liquid on your tongue?

It is very unpleasant. I doubt anyone could bring themselves to drink a full ml let alone enough to kill them and I don't care how sweet smelling it is.


Some things should just speak for themselves.

Why raise red flags when we haven't even seen any yellow flags yet.


I can agree with the container issue to a point. I actually like the way revolver packages there carts and liquids (child-proof bottles and containers). I've purchased several of these. But at certain times, adults should be allowed to be adults.

Still, these liquids have been available for years and here, in lawsuit central, no causes for alarm yet.

No kid is going to order these liquids to drink or bathe in. Seriously.


Gloves and facemasks? to refill carts? I can't imagine all of the nicotine in these liquids have a 100% absorption rate. Even if they did, what kind of spills are we talking about?


If you mix your own, well that's a different category and I seriously doubt any newb starts using e-cigs on their own brew. So when it comes to gloves and masks and actually mixing your own, I'll leave that to the individual mixer to decide after gleaning the vast amount of knowledge contained on DIY boards.
 
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deewal

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But...

Have you ever put a single drop of e-liquid on your tongue?

It is very unpleasant. I doubt anyone could bring themselves to drink a full ml let alone enough to kill them and I don't care how sweet smelling it is.


Some things should just speak for themselves.

Why raise red flags when we haven't even seen any yellow flags yet.


I can agree with the container issue to a point. I actually like the way revolver packages there carts and liquids (child-proof bottles and containers). I've purchased several of these. But at certain times, adults should be allowed to be adults.

Still, these liquids have been available for years and here, in lawsuit central, no causes for alarm yet.

No kid is going to order these liquids to drink or bathe in. Seriously.


Gloves and facemasks? to refill carts? I can't imagine all of the nicotine in these liquids have a 100% absorption rate. Even if they did, what kind of spills are we talking about?


If you mix your own, well that's a different category and I seriously doubt any newb starts using e-cigs on their own brew. So when it comes to gloves and masks and actually mixing your own, I'll leave that to the individual mixer to decide after gleaning the vast amount of knowledge contained on DIY boards.

I agree. Have you ever tasted Strwberry flavoured or any flavoured 36mg Liquid ? It is so foul tasting that the urge to spit it out is instant. How many people are trying to make Cart Mods so this leaking does'nt happen.
? Hundreds. Why are they not all dead or in Hospital because of Nicotine Poisoning from the Liquid that got into their mouths ?
About 4 months ago i was struggling trying to open a 30ml Childproof Bottle of 36mg Liquid. I pulled too hard in frustration and spilled the whole bottle over my hands and jeans. I spent at least 10 minutes trying to wipe it off my Jeans before i even thought about washing my hands (by this time i had Liquid on Both hands and my face). One of the main problems i had with my first Janty Stick was that it kept leaking liquid into my mouth.
I actually wrote a post somewhere on this forum about "needing to carry a Spitoon" with me if i used it out of the house.
As you can see i'm still alive and as crazy as ever.
 

kai kane

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Millions of ecig users -but is there ONE credible report of serious overdose related to unregulated use of the ecig product? One?

One the other hand, anyone can overdose on OTC alcohol, tobacco, coffee, cough syrup, and even FDA approved and regulated products: this about FDA NRTs, "Boy, 14, overdoses on nicotine gum given out at school" link

Smokers have a tolerance beyond the average person, thus less likely to overdose.

Should this be a soundbite:"Regulators concerned some cigarette users may put larger tobacco quantities in unfiltered pipes, and get a much higher toxic nicotine concentration " ???

Also approved by the FDA, and recommended as an smoking cessation aid - Wellbutrin and Chantix - with myriad documented suicide related effects. Yet it is stiil marketed by Pharma, recommended by Dr.s, used as prescribed, and resulting in "extremely unpleasant" deaths.

I am concerned about Federal attempts to regulate stupidity, backed by Corporate and other major financial self-interests, especially when the same mechanisms then create the actual environment that can actually encourage it... did the suicide victims of Wellbutrin and Chantix self-prescribe it?

...and did the child eat the gum because it was sweet?

Previous tests conducted by Dr E. say no (Posted by teissenb:...I must amend my disclosure: I did work on a project funded by pharma that had something to do with nicotine.). And that nicotine gum study proved kids are NOT more likely to eat it because it is flavored ...

Did he find it in his mom's house? No, it was given out by "authorities".

(Even a million dollar FDA acceptable study cannot prevent bias, and millions in regulation cannot prevent stupidity.)

Was the nicotine gum in a child-proof container? No. On the other hand, all my juices came with child-proof caps, though I feel as well they absolutely need better labeling.
 

Mister

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So can you folks agree on one unmodified device and one marketed cartridge that you are as certain as you can be (without a blood test) delivers nicotine? If you can, I'll get it and see where we can go from there. I can tell you that there is no way an IRB is going to allow device modifications and/or this "dripping" procedure, so it would have to be off-the-shelf stuff. I doubt everyone is going to want to read each person's individual reply here so that may NOT be the way to go -- is there some way to organize your thoughts (perhaps a new thread)?
Dr. Eissenberg, I created a thread for forum users to discuss this.

There hasn't even been a lot of interest in that thread and I don't think it will reach enough posts to be considered a consensus.
I suspect that people are uninterested because they don't expect your study conditions to find nicotine even in an e-cigarette they're sure is delivering nicotine. In the real world almost every person who buys an e-cig is going to give it a great deal more than 10 puffs before they conclude that it works or doesn't work for them. They're not going to throw away their $40 (or $150) purchase because it doesn't give them nicotine satisfaction after 10 puffs. Heck, self-titration is mostly subconcious - if they try an e-cig 15 minutes after their last smoke they won't have any concious realization of whether nicotine was delivered. To produce results with real world value the study must be done differently.

Regardless of what e-cigarette is used and how it is prepared (setting aside concerns that your subjects were inhaling primer fluid etc.) the strongest conclusion which could be drawn from your study's conditions if no significant plasma nicotine was observed would be that
When a person tries their first electronic cigarette, no significant amount of nicotine is absorbed from the first 10 puffs.
I think that a consensus has developed here that this, if shown credibly, would be only a mildly interesting observation and given the nicotine level required to be considered significant, not very surprising.

FYI, if you continue to study e-cigs and you want to purchase devices which we believe to deliver nicotine at the stated levels in the vapor, and you want devices which minimize (but don't eliminate!) the subject's learning curve, a number of people believe that the following product would serve well. I have not personally used this product but I agree with those who think it would be a very good choice based on my reading on this forum:
The manual Vapor King from Vapor4Life. (A manual switch device produces vapor more consistently than an automatic one.) You can purchase however many of the standard manual batteries you want (at least two seems desirable to allow for one in-use and one charging at any given time) from this page: Vapor King Batteries. You should purchase at least one charger from this page: Vapor King Charger.

The recommended cartomizers to use are the Cowboy flavor (the flavor closest to Marlborough cigarettes) at this page: Vapor King Cowboy Cartomizers. A number of strengths can be ordered from that page. The majority's suggestion is the 24mg strength but if the subjects are light smokers the 16mg might be more suitable. It might be worthwhile to also order 0mg (i.e. no nicotine) cartomizers for some study conditions, e.g. if you want to provide the subjects time to gain familiarity with the device in advance.

The above is all you will need to test the device. If you'd prefer to purchase everything as a single kit the recommended kit is the "Ultimate" at this page: Vapor King Kits. The kit is a more expensive purchase because it includes components which are unnecessary for your testing but are desirable to many consumers (case and alternate power options.)
 

Mister

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What I don't understand about the whole banning of e-cigs is, they don't have to have nicotine in them so why should the actual cig be banned? Here in the uk you can buy all sorts of drug related pipes and bongs in shops and markets even though drugs are illegal, surely e-cig equipment can't be banned. I can understand the FDA 's ability to ban the juices if they contain controlled, medicinal or regulated substances but surely not the actual equipment?? You can buy a car in a dangerous condition as long as you don't use it on the road? so what's the deal?
 

teissenb

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Mister:

Thanks for the info about devices. I am open to purchasing several to see what I can find out in informal study before starting more controlled (and more costly!) work. FYI, the next study I'd like to do is not another 10-puff study but rather a more "real-world" evaluation that involves 5 days' use (as in Breland et al., 2006 or Study 2 of the Gray et al paper I cited earlier).

As for the quotation you cite, see post 521, this thread.

Tom E.
 

teissenb

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KK: For the record, I did not conduct the gum study. I helped to design it, and co-authored it, and stand by the data of course, but to say that I conducted it would be dishonest on my part. Like you, I share your amazement at the absence of serious overdose with all these bottles of nicotine lying about. As my mother would say, "It is to wonder..."
 
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Mister

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As for the quotation you cite, see post 521, this thread.
I did read post 521, thank you. I asked the question in post 533 because 521 did not address it. To repeat,

the article at VCU researcher says electronic cigarettes don't deliver the nicotine they promise | Richmond Times-Dispatch quotes you as saying:
"If people are reporting what they are reporting about cravings, the data suggest it's not because of the drugs in the device,"
Is that a correct quote, and do you stand by it?
 

slybootz

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KK: For the record, I did not conduct the gum study. I helped to design it, and co-authored it, and stand by the data of course, but to say that I conducted it would be dishonest on my part. Like you, I share your amazement at the absence of serious overdose with all these bottled of nicotine lying about. As my mother would say, "It is to wonder..."

I definitely agree! Just because there hasn't been any serious overdoses or deaths yet, doesn't mean they won't happen in the future. As PV users, we should be open to allowing regulations on labeling and availability of bottled nicotine, as long as it doesn't impose ridiculous taxes and outright ban the availability of e-liquid.

In response to deewal's post,
About 4 months ago i was struggling trying to open a 30ml Childproof Bottle of 36mg Liquid. I pulled too hard in frustration and spilled the whole bottle over my hands and jeans. I spent at least 10 minutes trying to wipe it off my Jeans before i even thought about washing my hands (by this time i had Liquid on Both hands and my face). One of the main problems i had with my first Janty Stick was that it kept leaking liquid into my mouth.
I actually wrote a post somewhere on this forum about "needing to carry a Spitoon" with me if i used it out of the house.
As you can see i'm still alive and as crazy as ever.

Yes, you're alive. But would a child/teenager with no nicotine tolerance, or a pet, be alive if the same thing happened to them? There has already been at least one ECF user that reported the loss of a pet after their dog chewed up a bottle of e-liquid. Regulation does not mean prohibition, so we should be open to a fair regulation on e-liquids. If we oppose any form of regulation, it could leave us with a negative public image.
 
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