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The chemistry and toxicology of vaping

Authors :
Emerson Christie
Stephanie A. Maggio
Brittany Cunningham
Robyn L Tanguay
Michael T. Simonich
Victoria Colvin
Emily M. Bonner
Brianna N. Rivera
Bethany Parker
Yvonne Rericha
Sara J Hutton
Ian Moran
Christine C. Ghetu
Prarthana Shankar
Siva Kumar Kolluri
Yvonne Chang
Lindsay B Wilson
Juliana Huizenga
Trever Schwichtenberg
Samantha Samon
Daniel S. Elson
Source :
Pharmacol Ther
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Vaping is the process of inhaling and exhaling an aerosol produced by an e-cigarette, vape pen, or personal aerosolizer. When the device contains nicotine, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) lists the product as an electronic nicotine delivery system or ENDS device. Similar electronic devices can be used to vape cannabis extracts. Over the past decade, the vaping market has increased exponentially, raising health concerns over the number of people exposed and a nationwide outbreak of cases of severe, sometimes fatal, lung dysfunction that arose suddenly in otherwise healthy individuals. In this review, we discuss the various vaping technologies, which are remarkably diverse, and summarize the use prevalence in the U.S. over time by youths and adults. We examine the complex chemistry of vape carrier solvents, flavoring chemicals, and transformation products. We review the health effects from epidemiological and laboratory studies and, finally, discuss the proposed mechanisms underlying some of these health effects. We conclude that since much of the research in this area is recent and vaping technologies are dynamic, our understanding of the health effects is insufficient. With the rapid growth of ENDS use, consumers and regulatory bodies need a better understanding of constituent-dependent toxicity to guide product use and regulatory decisions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pharmacol Ther
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....06882daca6270d946598e8f41c750ad9