Hello! I hope it's ok to post here, I have a pretty serious question.
My hubby got his first e-cig just a few weeks ago...(an E9 from E-cig.com) He ordered the highest nic in his initial cartomizers (36mg) and after a few puffs he became nauseated and got a headache and vomited. We concluded that the nicotine was too high for him.
Today we got in some 16mg cartomizers and he tried those... about 4 puffs and he started feeling ill again. He smokes a pack or a bit more a day in "analogs" he rolls himself with filtered tubes and pipe tobacco. So it's surprising that he's getting sick on the higher mg of nic, he needed the highest available nic therapy patch when he couldn't smoke because he stayed with me in the hospital.
So could this be something else? He wants to know if the base makes a difference in nic absorbtion... Like if PG gives better "throat hit", is that because it is a more efficient in nicotine delivery? Could a sensitivity to PG result in symptoms like these?
Also, what would be the quickest, easiest, cheapest way to dilute these too concentrated solutions so he can safely vape them? Is there anyway to find the kind of PG or VG that is safe to vape locally, in a small town? Or should we just order some nic-free premixed ejuice since we're new at this?
Thanks in advance!
My hubby got his first e-cig just a few weeks ago...(an E9 from E-cig.com) He ordered the highest nic in his initial cartomizers (36mg) and after a few puffs he became nauseated and got a headache and vomited. We concluded that the nicotine was too high for him.
Today we got in some 16mg cartomizers and he tried those... about 4 puffs and he started feeling ill again. He smokes a pack or a bit more a day in "analogs" he rolls himself with filtered tubes and pipe tobacco. So it's surprising that he's getting sick on the higher mg of nic, he needed the highest available nic therapy patch when he couldn't smoke because he stayed with me in the hospital.
So could this be something else? He wants to know if the base makes a difference in nic absorbtion... Like if PG gives better "throat hit", is that because it is a more efficient in nicotine delivery? Could a sensitivity to PG result in symptoms like these?
Also, what would be the quickest, easiest, cheapest way to dilute these too concentrated solutions so he can safely vape them? Is there anyway to find the kind of PG or VG that is safe to vape locally, in a small town? Or should we just order some nic-free premixed ejuice since we're new at this?
Thanks in advance!