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E-cigarette vapors contain toxic chemicals, study finds

By Allen Cone
Johns Hopkins scientists found that the aerosol from e-cigarettes contains toxic levels of lead, chromium, manganese and/or nickel. Photo by lindsayfox/pixabay
Johns Hopkins scientists found that the aerosol from e-cigarettes contains toxic levels of lead, chromium, manganese and/or nickel. Photo by lindsayfox/pixabay

Feb. 22 (UPI) -- E-cigarette vapors contain toxic metals, including lead, that leak from the heating coils, according to a new study.

Scientists at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health examined e-cigarette battery-powered devices owned by 56 users, publishing their findings Wednesday in Environmental Health Perspectives.

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The aerosols contained potentially unsafe levels of lead, chromium, manganese and/or nickel, the scientists reported. These materials, when inhaled chronically, have been linked to lung, liver, immune, cardiovascular and brain damage and cancers.

In an earlier study of users, researchers found nickel and chromium level in urine and saliva were high, meaning they were exposed to the materials from the aerosol.

The Food and Drug Administration hasn't yet regulated e-cigarettes.

"It's important for the FDA, the e-cigarette companies and vapers themselves to know that these heating coils, as currently made, seem to be leaking toxic metals -- which then get into the aerosols that vapers inhale," Dr. Ana María Rule, an assistant scientist in the Bloomberg School's Department of Environmental Health and Engineering said in a release.

Vaping allows users to ingest nicotine and enjoy the look and feel of tobacco-smoking, but without the extreme health risks of cigarettes. In E-cigarettes, an electric current passes through a metal coil to heat "e-liquids," creating an aerosol vapor.

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Rule and her colleagues, including lead author Pablo Olmedo, recruited 56 daily e-cigarette users from vaping conventions and e-cigarette shops around Baltimore during the fall of 2015.

They tested for the presence of 15 metals in the e-liquids in the vapers' refilling dispensers, the e-liquids in coils' tanks and in the generated aerosols. Four metals were excluded because of low levels: arsenic, titanium, uranium and tungsten. However, among 10 users significant levels of arsenic were found in refill e-liquid, tanks and aerosol samples.

Although minimal levels of metals were found in the e-liquids within refilling dispensers, the metal contamination transferred to aerosols produced by heating the e-liquids.

The median lead concentration in the aerosols was more than 25 times greater than the median in the refill dispensers.

In the aerosol samples, almost 50 percent of them had lead concentrations higher than health-based limits defined by the Environmental Protection Agency. Nickel, chromium and manganese approached or exceeded safe limits, the researchers report.

The source of the lead isn't known, although e-cigarette heating coils typically contain nickel and chromium, among other elements.

"We don't know yet whether metals are chemically leaching from the coil or vaporizing when it's heated," Rule said.

The researchers also found aerosol metal amounts were higher in coils that are frequently changed.

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