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Harmful chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes and potential deleterious effects in the oral cavity

Use of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS), such as electronic cigarettes (e-cigs), is increasing across the US population and is particularly troubling due to their adoption by adolescents, teens, and young adults. The industry’s marketing approach for these instruments of addiction has bee...

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Autores principales: Ebersole, Jeffrey, Samburova, Vera, Son, Yeongkwon, Cappelli, David, Demopoulos, Christina, Capurro, Antonina, Pinto, Andres, Chrzan, Brian, Kingsley, Karl, Howard, Katherine, Clark, Nathaniel, Khlystov, Andrey
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: European Publishing on behalf of the International Society for the Prevention of Tobacco Induced Diseases (ISPTID) 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7233525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32435175
http://dx.doi.org/10.18332/tid/116988
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author Ebersole, Jeffrey
Samburova, Vera
Son, Yeongkwon
Cappelli, David
Demopoulos, Christina
Capurro, Antonina
Pinto, Andres
Chrzan, Brian
Kingsley, Karl
Howard, Katherine
Clark, Nathaniel
Khlystov, Andrey
author_facet Ebersole, Jeffrey
Samburova, Vera
Son, Yeongkwon
Cappelli, David
Demopoulos, Christina
Capurro, Antonina
Pinto, Andres
Chrzan, Brian
Kingsley, Karl
Howard, Katherine
Clark, Nathaniel
Khlystov, Andrey
author_sort Ebersole, Jeffrey
collection PubMed
description Use of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS), such as electronic cigarettes (e-cigs), is increasing across the US population and is particularly troubling due to their adoption by adolescents, teens, and young adults. The industry’s marketing approach for these instruments of addiction has been to promote them as a safer alternative to tobacco, a behavioral choice supporting smoking cessation, and as the ‘cool’ appearance of vaping with flavored products (e.g. tutti frutti, bubble gum, and buttered popcorn etc.). Thus, there is a clear need to better document the health outcomes of e-cig use in the oral cavity of the addicted chronic user. There appears to be an array of environmental toxins in the vapors, including reactive aldehydes and carbonyls resulting from the heating elements action on fluid components, as well as from the composition of chemical flavoring agents. The chemistry of these systems shows that the released vapors from the e-cigs frequently contain levels of environmental toxins that considerably exceed federal occupational exposure limits. Additionally, the toxicants in the vapors appear to be retained in the host fluids/tissues at levels often approximating 90% of the levels in the e-cig vapors. These water-soluble reactive toxins can challenge the oral cavity constituents, potentially contributing to alterations in the autochthonous microbiome and host cells critical for maintaining oral homeostasis. This review updates the existing chemistry/environmental aspects of e-cigs, as well as providing an overview of the somewhat limited data on potential oral health effects that could occur across the lifetime of daily e-cig users.
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spelling pubmed-72335252020-05-20 Harmful chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes and potential deleterious effects in the oral cavity Ebersole, Jeffrey Samburova, Vera Son, Yeongkwon Cappelli, David Demopoulos, Christina Capurro, Antonina Pinto, Andres Chrzan, Brian Kingsley, Karl Howard, Katherine Clark, Nathaniel Khlystov, Andrey Tob Induc Dis Review Paper Use of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS), such as electronic cigarettes (e-cigs), is increasing across the US population and is particularly troubling due to their adoption by adolescents, teens, and young adults. The industry’s marketing approach for these instruments of addiction has been to promote them as a safer alternative to tobacco, a behavioral choice supporting smoking cessation, and as the ‘cool’ appearance of vaping with flavored products (e.g. tutti frutti, bubble gum, and buttered popcorn etc.). Thus, there is a clear need to better document the health outcomes of e-cig use in the oral cavity of the addicted chronic user. There appears to be an array of environmental toxins in the vapors, including reactive aldehydes and carbonyls resulting from the heating elements action on fluid components, as well as from the composition of chemical flavoring agents. The chemistry of these systems shows that the released vapors from the e-cigs frequently contain levels of environmental toxins that considerably exceed federal occupational exposure limits. Additionally, the toxicants in the vapors appear to be retained in the host fluids/tissues at levels often approximating 90% of the levels in the e-cig vapors. These water-soluble reactive toxins can challenge the oral cavity constituents, potentially contributing to alterations in the autochthonous microbiome and host cells critical for maintaining oral homeostasis. This review updates the existing chemistry/environmental aspects of e-cigs, as well as providing an overview of the somewhat limited data on potential oral health effects that could occur across the lifetime of daily e-cig users. European Publishing on behalf of the International Society for the Prevention of Tobacco Induced Diseases (ISPTID) 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7233525/ /pubmed/32435175 http://dx.doi.org/10.18332/tid/116988 Text en © 2020 Ebersole J. et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Review Paper
Ebersole, Jeffrey
Samburova, Vera
Son, Yeongkwon
Cappelli, David
Demopoulos, Christina
Capurro, Antonina
Pinto, Andres
Chrzan, Brian
Kingsley, Karl
Howard, Katherine
Clark, Nathaniel
Khlystov, Andrey
Harmful chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes and potential deleterious effects in the oral cavity
title Harmful chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes and potential deleterious effects in the oral cavity
title_full Harmful chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes and potential deleterious effects in the oral cavity
title_fullStr Harmful chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes and potential deleterious effects in the oral cavity
title_full_unstemmed Harmful chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes and potential deleterious effects in the oral cavity
title_short Harmful chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes and potential deleterious effects in the oral cavity
title_sort harmful chemicals emitted from electronic cigarettes and potential deleterious effects in the oral cavity
topic Review Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7233525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32435175
http://dx.doi.org/10.18332/tid/116988
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