cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Electronic Cigarettes and the State of Science

Dr_Hays
Mayo Clinic
0 12 99

Electronic cigarettes seem to have taken the world by storm.  There are now nearly 500 electronic cigarette products and over 7000 electronic cigarette solutions (“e-juice”) available on the internet (1).  The rapid growth of electronic cigarettes has taken the clinical and scientific world by surprise.  We still have not become accustomed to how rapidly new technologies can spread in his age of social media and entrepreneurship.  The gap between manufacturers and users of electronic cigarettes, and scientists who would like to study electronic cigarettes has created a big problem.  The problem is that we do not have reliable data to tell us whether electronic cigarettes are safe and if they might be helpful for people who want to stop smoking.

There is no doubt electronic cigarettes produce far fewer harmful chemicals than tobacco smoke (2).  This means that smokers who switch from regular cigarettes to electronic cigarettes ought to have less risk of developing tobacco caused diseases.  But in today’s world most of the people using electronic cigarettes also smoke traditional combustible cigarettes so they may not be doing themselves any favors.  Public health scientists are also worried electronic cigarettes may entice young people to start smoking.  There are small bits of evidence that this in fact is happening (3).  Science tends to move slowly while the internet and social media tends to propel new trends at lightning speed.  How will we ever catch up?

There are a lot of scientists who are very interested in studying electronic cigarettes to help people stop smoking and whether or not widespread use of electronic cigarettes would be an overall benefit for public health.  There are over 100 planned and ongoing scientific studies focused on electronic cigarettes.  If you have an interest in knowing more about this research on electronic cigarettes you can check out the website “clinicaltrial.gov” for a brief description of each study (4).

But for today, we will have to be satisfied with incomplete information.  I still advise my patients who want to quit smoking to use what we know works.  That includes both behavioral (changing what I think and do) and medication treatment.  If someone is determined to quit smoking using electronic cigarettes, it is probably worth a try.  The key is to have a goal to completely quit tobacco and ultimately to stop using electronic cigarettes too.  If that goal cannot be reached using electronic cigarettes than using proven quit methods is the best approach.  It will take a few years, but I am confident that the science will eventually catch up and we will understand how best to use electronic cigarettes to eliminate the harm caused by tobacco.

 

References:

1.       Zhu, Shu-Hong; Sun, Jessica Y; Bonnevie, Erika et al. (2014) Four hundred and sixty brands of e-cigarettes and counting: implications for product regulation. Tob Control 23 Suppl 3:iii3-9

 

2.       Hajek, P., et al., Electronic cigarettes: review of use, content, safety, effects on smokers and potential for harm and benefit. Addiction, 2014. 109(11): p. 1801-1810.

 

3.       Leventhal AM, Strong DR, Kirkpatrick MG, et al. Association of Electronic Cigarette Use With Initiation of Combustible Tobacco Product Smoking in Early Adolescence. JAMA. 2015;314(7):700-707. doi:10.1001/jama.2015.8950.

 

4.       https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/home

12 Comments
YoungAtHeart
Member

All of the known health and quit success information aside, they can EXPODE in your face, or in your pocket without any means to prevent it.    That's enough for me to think they are a bad idea.

Nancy

Eric_L.
Member

Yes.

JonesCarpeDiem

Unlearning the repetition and mptions of smoking is paramount to freedom.

Giulia
Member

I don't, doc.  If you suck on a lollipop with nicotine or are stuck sucking on one without - you're still - seems to me - addicted to the lollipop, even if the latter is better for you.  As you say the ultimate goal is to completely stop using both inhalants (cigs and e-cigs) .  As you also say, it's going to be years before the studies have been completed.  And by then a new generation will be hooked.  And even if the word comes down from high that e-cigs are harmful - do you imagine that the government will put a ban on them?  By then the tobacco companies will already be immerced in their profits from them.

I've said for years that if I could smoke without penalty, I would.  Although I recognize it as an addiction, I did enjoy it at times.  You do, after all, get that dopamine high. Interestingly with the advent of the e-cig I find myself with a completely different mind set.  I recognize now after having been free of the addiction for 10 years, that I don't want to be a slave to ANYTHING.  'Cause it's a bear to have to work your way out of it.  And you can bet that at some point in the future most will want to become free.  Because being free is simply part of our human nature.

Our lungs were meant to inhale oxygen without additives.  Seems like a no brainer to me that inhaling steaming vapor over the long run probably WILL have some negative impact on one's health.  And if you add nicotine into the mix, are you really that much better off?  From the little I know about nicotine - it has it's own deliterous health effects.  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4363846/

I wonder if one would become addicted to an e-cig if it had no nicotine in it,  just a flavor.  Is the behavioral aspect alone enough to create an addiction?  Or is it  the dopamine high that creates it?   Any studies been done on that?

MarilynH
Member

These E cigs scare me half to death knowing that they can blow up in your face or in your pocket but thankfully the main reason I didn't want them was because they are expensive plus I didn't want to take the chance that I might get addicted to them. So I quit cold turkey with sugar free mints and This site so some of you may call that smart turkey or something like that but I pray that they'll take the E cigs off the market before someone dies from them, there's way too much we don't know about the dangers of them. 

TerrieQuit
Member

Awhile back I read where they had to put a guy in a coma because an E~Cig (battery) blew up in his mouth and again in his throat and the pain was just too much! That is just very scary to me.

I do know of a couple of quitters that have used 0 nicotine e~cig, sparingly, just to get through their initial quit and it worked for them.

I used one a couple of years ago and it tasted so crappy, and I still ended up smoking cigarettes. I did not find that helpful!

I wish they would ban them!

I Won't Quit on my Quit!

Breakinchains
Member

I don't see E cigs as a quit aid, only a replacement. Are there any successful cases of people quitting using E cigs? I haven't heard of any. Best to stick with more proven methods of quitting.

Dr_Hays
Mayo Clinic

@Giulia Two random controlled studies have shown that using zero nicotine e-cigarettes can lower the number of cigarettes smoked in a day, though abstinence rates using e-cigs - with or without nicotine - appear quite low.  

@Breakinthechains There are stories of people stopping smoking using e-cigarettes as there are examples of people using hypnosis to successfully quit smoking.  However, we need clinical studies to determine if these treatments are effective at the population level.  For example, while hypnosis may work for some, it has been shown to be no more effective than no treatment for the majority of smokers.  Research to determine the effectiveness of e-cigarettes as a stop smoking aid is limited, which is why the Mayo Clinic Nicotine Dependence Center advocates for evidenced-based treatments for our patients.

 

References: 

McRobbie H, Bullen C, Hartmann-Boyce J, Hajek P. Electronic cigarettes for smoking cessation and reduction. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2014, Issue 12. Art. No.: CD010216. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD010216.pub2

Barnes J, Dong CY, McRobbie H, Walker N, Mehta M, Stead LF. Hypnotherapy for smoking cessation. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2010, Issue 10. Art. No.: CD001008. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD001008.pub2

Giulia
Member

Thanks for the response Dr. Hays.  Ah yes, it's all about abstinence, isn't it.  Quitting is one part, remaining so quite another. 

Mike.n.Atlanta

Lot's of people have quit using the e-cig. However, They have continued to use the e-cig.

KOKO,

brondas
Member
To everyone wanting to know about the E-Cig, I can tell what I have experienced for myself from them. As you know I have a few different brands and also one the has the liquid that you can Putin them yourself well because my lungs were in such bad shape before I decided to quit smoking I did get pneumonia from the e-cig because my doctor said the vapor put more mositure into my lungs, and in ever did completely quit smoking real cigs, and ended up smoking again, however my daughter quit using the e-cig by going from the highest mg of nicotine to the lowest and then to no nicotine and finally laid the e-cig down and was finished she has been cig free for 2 yrs. now and we are all very proud of her!!, but for those of you who don't know about them, the e-vapor liquid that you can put in them has different mgs. It is 21mg, 18, 14, 10, & 8 mgs. Then there is the no nicotine flavors you can buy. For the cost of a pk of cigs and the cost of a btl of the e-vapor liquid or e-juice as some call it you do save a lot of money! But for me personally I think they are dangerous and like some have said you are just switching one for the other so what's the point. But if do it the way it was intended by tapering the nicotine then great it may work for you. But as I said I ended up with pneumonia so I do not think they are good for people. Thanks for reading!
JonesCarpeDiem

@Brondas

2 years means 2 years of vapor use. will she ever stop using it?

How can anyone unlearn smoking by doing the same motions?

About the Author
An expert in tobacco use and dependence, Dr. Hays has authored and co-authored over 70 peer-reviewed scholarly articles and book chapters on various aspects tobacco dependence and its treatment. Since joining the Nicotine Dependence Center in 1992, he and its staff have treated more than 50,000 patients for tobacco dependence.