People puffing e-cigs are more
likely to have heart attacks, strokes and depression
A new,
yet to-be-published study of nearly 100,000 Americans finds e-cigarette users
are 56 percent more likely to have a heart attack and 30 percent more likely to
have a stroke than non-users.
"These
data are a real wake-up call and should prompt more action and awareness about
the dangers of e-cigarettes," said Dr. Mohinder Vindhyal, assistant
professor at the University of Kansas School of Medicine Wichita and the
study's lead author, in a statement.
The
research, which will be presented on March 18 at the American College of
Cardiology's 68th Annual Scientific Session, is the latest evidence that the
fast rise of e-cigarettes—often marketed as a way to quit traditional tobacco
use—may be leaving users with serious health impacts and comes as the feds crackdown
on e-cigarette sales to children.
E-cigarettes come in many varieties but most are battery operated and heat a liquid that contains nicotine, solvents, and sometimes flavorings and other chemicals, to create a vapor that is inhaled, which is often referred to as vaping.
Researchers
examined data from 96,467 people from the National Health Interview Survey,
which is run by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. They had
information from 2014, 2016 and 2017 and looked at whether or not people used
e-cigarettes and rates of high blood pressure, heart attacks, strokes, and
depression and anxiety.
Compared
to non-users, they found e-cigarette users were 56 percent more likely to have
a heart attack and 30 percent more likely to suffer a stroke. Users reported 10
percent more coronary artery disease problems and 44 percent more circulatory
problems. In addition, users were twice as likely to have depression or
anxiety.
"When
the risk of heart attack increases by as much as 55 percent among e-cigarettes
users compared to nonsmokers, I wouldn't want any of my patients nor my family
members to vape," Vindhyal said.
"When we dug deeper, we found that regardless of how frequently someone uses e-cigarettes, daily or just on some days, they are still more likely to have a heart attack or coronary artery disease."
"When we dug deeper, we found that regardless of how frequently someone uses e-cigarettes, daily or just on some days, they are still more likely to have a heart attack or coronary artery disease."
Vindhyal
and colleagues also looked at risk from traditional tobacco use and it was even
worse: Compared to non-users, traditional tobacco users were 165 percent more
likely to have a heart attack and 78 percent more likely to have a stroke.
"Cigarette
smoking carries a much higher probability of heart attack and stroke than
e-cigarettes, but that doesn't mean that vaping is safe," Vindhyal said.
The
study comes just a couple months after another national study that
examined data from 400,000 Americans and linked e-cigarette use with a 70
percent higher risk of stroke, 60 percent higher risk of heart attacks.
In
2017, researchers found college
students that reported depression symptoms were more likely to start smoking
e-cigarettes.
The
study doesn't point to potential causes of the increased health risks, but
there are multiple chemicals in e-cigarettes for flavoring and to create the
vapor that could be targeting blood vessels and impacting the heart.
Feds
take aim at sales to children
E-cigarettes
are a fast-growing market—an estimated 1 out of 20 people in the U.S. are
users, and there are an estimated 460 brands.
Regulators
are scrambling to catch up. Just this week U.S. Food and Drug Administration
Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb put out a strong statement calling
kids' e-cigarette use an "epidemic" and outlined actions to stop
children's access to the products.
The
letter called out retailers such as Walgreen Co., 7-Eleven, and gas stations
such as Marathon, Exxon, Sunoco, BP, Citgo and Mobil, for having
"disturbingly high rates of violations for illegal sales of tobacco
products to minors."
"Companies
should be on notice that the FDA is considering additional enforcement avenues
to address high rates of violations," Gottlieb wrote. "Ignoring the
law and then paying associated fines and penalties should not simply be viewed
as a cost of doing business.'
The
next day, Gottlieb, who was known even prior to the letter for his aggressive
actions to regulate tobacco and e-cigarette businesses, unexpectedly announced
that he would resign at the end of the month.