愛污传媒

Skip to main content

Study shows menthol flavour especially harmful to vape users

Share

Several of the chemicals used in flavoured e-cigarettes have been suspected for years of causing in people who vape, and new research suggests one "vape juice" flavour is especially harmful.

Adding mint flavour to e-cigarette liquids produces more vapour particles and is associated with worse lung function in those who smoke, researchers from the University of Pittsburgh published in the medical journal Respiratory Research on April 10.

"Many people, especially youth, erroneously assume that vaping is safe, but even nicotine-free vaping mixtures contain many compounds that can potentially damage the lungs," said Kambez H. Benam, senior author and associate professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, in a media release. "Just because something is safe to consume as food does not mean that it鈥檚 safe to inhale."

Using a biologically-inspired robotic system that mimics how a human inhales from a vape pen or e-cigarette, Benam and his team showed that commercially available e-cigarette liquids containing menthol generate a greater number of toxic microparticles compared to menthol-free juice.

The team also analyzed patient records from a cohort of e-cigarette smokers that revealed menthol vapers took shallower breaths and had poorer lung function compared to non-menthol smokers regardless of age, gender, race, years of smoking or whether they used nicotine or cannabis-containing vaping products.

Menthol is a flavour additive with a minty taste and aroma that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration says reduces the irritation and harshness of smoking, increasing the appeal of smoking for youth and young adults. Menthol also interacts with nicotine in the brain to enhance nicotine鈥檚 addictive effects, making it harder for people who smoke menthol cigarettes to quit smoking. For these reasons, the U.S. FDA has begun to pressure the tobacco industry to in products like cigarettes and cigars.

However, according to Benam and his co-authors, the vaping market is expanding too quickly for regulators to keep up with.

This is partly because traditional toxicity testing involving animals or living cells grown on a Petri dish can take months to produce high-quality, clinically-relevant data. According to the study, testing the safety of aerosolized products 鈥 otherwise known as vape pens or e-cigarettes 鈥 is further complicated because tests are usually conducted using mice and rats, despite the fact that their respiratory anatomy is so different from ours.

The vaping robot Benam and his team developed mimics the temperature, humidity and puff volume and duration of a human smoker. It can also simulate the patterns of healthy and diseased breathing and can reliably predict lung toxicity related to e-cigarettes.

The team hopes the research will show how their device can improve pre-clinical studies that look at how vaping liquids and additives combine to create different health effects. Mostly, though, they hope it demonstrates how e-cigarettes might not be the innocent alternative to cigarettes that clever marketing portrays them as.

"The main message that we want to put out there is for people, especially young adults, who haven鈥檛 smoked before," Benam said. "Switching to e-cigarettes may be a better, safer alternative for someone who is trying to quit smoking regular tobacco products. But it鈥檚 important to have full knowledge of e-cigarettes鈥 risks and benefits before trying them."

A GROWING BODY OF RESEARCH

Flavoured vaping products have been on the market since at least 2004 and since the late 1990s, and a growing body of research is shedding light on the specific ways the chemicals they contain damage lungs.

A study published by researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital in May 2022 was the first to microscopically examine the lung tissue of a small number of e-cigarette users for chronic disease. That study found similar to the chemical inhalation damage typically seen in soldiers returning from overseas conflicts who had inhaled mustard gas or similar types of noxious gases.

鈥淲e also observed that when patients ceased vaping, they had a partial reversal of the condition over one to four years, though not complete due to residual scarring in the lung tissue," Dr. Lida Hariri, lead author and physician investigator at Massachusetts General Hospital, said in a media release.

That study was published in the medical journal NEJM Evidence on May 13, and is in recent years to about the damaging effects of vaping on lung tissue, and

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

The Maritime Sikh Society says the body of a young employee who died at a Walmart in Halifax last weekend was found by her mother.

Montreal police say four teenagers suffered stab wounds after an altercation near John F. Kennedy High School in the city's Villeray鈥擲aint-Michel鈥擯arc-Extension borough on Thursday.

Four people are dead and another is in hospital after a Tesla driving through downtown Toronto at a high rate of speed crashed into a guardrail and struck a concrete pillar on Lake Shore Boulevard.

Voting officials say recounts in two ridings that could determine the outcome of British Columbia's election won't start until Sunday afternoon.

The Ottawa Police Service has identified the woman who was stabbed to death at Paul Landry Park on Uplands Drive Thursday morning.

Local Spotlight

A new resident at a Manitoba animal rescue has waddled her way into people's hearts.

Hundreds of people ran to the music of German composer and pianist Beethoven Wednesday night in a unique race in Halifax.

He is a familiar face to residents of a neighbourhood just west of Roncesvalles Avenue.

A meteor lit up our region's sky last night 鈥 with a large fireball shooting across the horizon over Lake Erie at around 7:00 p.m.

Residents of Ottawa's Rideauview neighbourhood say an aggressive wild turkey has become a problem.

A man who lost his life while trying to rescue people from floodwaters, and a 13-year-old boy who saved his family from a dog attack, are among the Nova Scotians who received a medal for bravery Tuesday.

A newly minted Winnipegger is hoping a world record attempt will help bring awareness for the need for more pump track facilities in the city.

A Springfield, Ont. man is being hailed a 'hero' after running into his burning home to save his two infant children.

Hortense Anglin was the oldest graduate to make her way across the platform at York University's Fall Convocation ceremony this week. At the age of 87, she graduated with an Honours degree in Religious Studies.