Federal Investigators Think Black-Market Vaping Products, Not Legal E-Cigarettes, Are to Blame for Respiratory Illnesses
While the specific causes remain unclear, contaminants and adulterants in illegal vapes look like the most likely explanation.
Despite attempts to blame recent reports of respiratory illnesses among vapers on legal e-cigarettes, investigators are increasingly inclined to think the real problem is hazardous chemicals in black-market THC and nicotine products. The Washington Post reports that "state and federal health authorities are focusing on the role of contaminants or counterfeit substances as a likely cause of vaping-related lung illnesses." They "are narrowing the possible culprits to adulterants in vaping products purported to have THC…as well as adulterants in nicotine vaping products."
That is consistent with the view of Scott Gottlieb, the former head of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), who this week said "these tragedies point to illegal vapes and THC." It is inconsistent with the take of anti-vaping scaremongers, who have seized on these cases as evidence against legal, commercially produced e-cigarettes that deliver nicotine.
"We strongly urge people to avoid vaping products and e-cigarettes," the Wisconsin Department of Health Services said after the first outbreak was reported. During a press briefing last week, Brian King of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) warned that "e-cigarettes do not emit a harmless aerosol" and "can include a variety of potential[ly] harmful ingredients." Although "we haven't specifically linked any of those specific ingredients to the current cases," he said, "we know that e-cigarette aerosol is not harmless." Journalists were likewise quick to draw a connection between the recent hospitalizations and legal e-cigarettes.
In a joint statement issued today, the FDA and the CDC offer more-relevant advice: "Anyone who does use e-cigarette products should not buy these products off the street (e.g., e-cigarette products with THC or other cannabinoids) and should not modify e-cigarette products or add any substances to these products that are not intended by the manufacturer." Possible culprits in the lung disease cases include contaminants in counterfeit cartridges, mislabeled solvents used to produce e-liquids, and synthetic cannabinoids or other substances advertised as THC. The FDA is analyzing 80 samples of substances vaped by the patients, and it is asking state officials to specify "the brand and types of e-cigarette products, whether any of them are products that would fall within the FDA's regulatory authority, [and] where they were obtained."
As of Tuesday, the FDA says, "215 possible cases have been reported from 25 states, and additional reports of pulmonary illness are under investigation." The specific causes remain unclear:
While some cases in each of the states are similar and appear to be linked to e-cigarette product use, more information is needed to determine what is causing the respiratory illnesses. In many cases, patients reported a gradual start of symptoms, including breathing difficulty, shortness of breath, and/or chest pain before hospitalization. Some cases reported mild to moderate gastrointestinal illness including vomiting and diarrhea, or other symptoms such as fevers or fatigue. In many cases, patients have also acknowledged recent use of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)-containing e-cigarette products while speaking to healthcare personnel, or in follow-up interviews by health department staff.
Even though cases appear similar, it is not clear if these cases have a common cause or if they are different diseases with similar presentations, which is why our ongoing investigation is critical.
As Boston University public health professor Michael Siegel notes, attributing these cases to "vaping" or "e-cigarettes" in general is unhelpful, misleading, and potentially dangerous, to the extent that it encourages vapers to start smoking again or deters current smokers from switching to nicotine products that are far less hazardous than conventional cigarettes. "It was immediately clear to me that these cases are not being caused by vaping products generally because these products have been on the market for years without any significant problems and because the reports are clustered in specific geographic areas," Siegel writes. Furthermore, it was clear early on that many of the patients had used black-market products, including purported cannabis extracts.
As I noted last week, blaming these respiratory illnesses on "vaping" is like blaming food poisoning on eating. It is encouraging that federal health officials are getting more specific.
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Well, the solution to this is to make all of it illegal, obviously.
And the great thing is this solution can be applied across the board to just about everything!
Harrumph! Tobacco cigarettes never gave anybody any respiratory illness. Now get off my lawn!
Just quit being babies and smoke real cigarettes. Drink real beer without out the fruity crap. Jeez
The FDA is analyzing 80 samples of substances vaped by the patients, and it is asking state officials to specify “the brand and types of e-cigarette products, whether any of them are products that would fall within the FDA’s regulatory authority, [and] where they were obtained.”
Guess who just got a new list of Things It’s Vitally Important The FDA’s Regulatory Authority Be Expanded To Include. For The Children.
Never forget, as you watch this War On Vaping, that these are the same sort of people who forced companies to add methyl alcohol to their industrial alcohol during Prohibition, even knowing that people were going to be drinking it anyway and the methyl alcohol would kill them. When the government tells you vaping is dangerous for your health, you’d better listen because the government is liable to go out of their way to make damn sure vaping is as dangerous to your health as possible. I mean, they warned us how dangerous cigarettes were and Eric Garner didn’t listen and look what happened to him.
I don’t know whether there’s any truth to it, but back in the day the word on pot was that the US FedGov was deliberately spraying MJ crops with a chemical that would cause brain damage when people smoked it, as a “deterrent.”
I used to get paranoid on pot too.
I still remember a line from some random comedian talking about driving high, and his friend asking whether the cop is still following them. He replies “yeah, but now he’s in a truck.”
Jimmy Carter and paraquat.It asn’t as dangerous as believed at the time but the peanut-farmer president wanted the DEA-funded poison program to deter potsmokers.
What? People who produce and consume media used hasty, uninformed “logic” to reach a simple, wrong conclusion? And various government agencies followed up with reinforcing wrong information? Which led to more incorrect media?
Its almost like people are dumb or something.
When I was at UCLA in the early ’70s the only major on campus that had no math or science requirement was journalism. Art history, music, drama all had to take some math or science for liberal arts majors, but not future journalists. Explains a lot.
“The Washington Post reports that “state and federal health authorities are focusing on the role of contaminants or counterfeit substances as a likely cause of vaping-related lung illnesses.””
But only after they had several days of horror stories of folks getting ill and dying from “vaping”, without any specifics of caveats.
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You would think federal investigators would have more important things to do like investigate murderers crossing state lines, terrorist networks, counterfeiting rings, etc. instead of the innocuous vaping devices.
Taxpayers’ money well spent.
ok but whats next then?
Betcha this inconvenient fact never sees the light of day in mainstream media. Good article.
an unregulated product is being exploited by people selling black market items which are dangerous. I am so shocked because that has never happened before, ever. LMAO!!
I still remember a line from some random comedian talking about driving high, and his friend asking whether the cop is still following them. Thanks