Vapouround magazine Issue 25 | Page 81

commercial nicotine e-liquids and illegal and possibly adulterated THC oils. The alert said: “All patients have reported using e-cigarette products and the symptom onset has ranged from a few days to several weeks after e-cigarette use. “Within two states, recent inhalation of cannabinoid products, THC or cannabidiol, have been reported in many of the patients.” Michael Siegel, a professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences, Boston University School of Public Health, was quick to make the distinction between commercially-produced vape products and illegal THC use. He said: “These cases are not being caused by vaping products generally because these products have been on the market for years without any signifi cant problems and because the reports are clustered in specifi c geographic areas. “Now that further information is available, it is clear that the majority of the observed cases are associated with the use of THC oils that were obtained from unlicensed sellers.” Nonetheless, the CDC urged the public to ‘consider refraining from using e-cigarette products’ and instead use FDA-approved smoking- cessation products or seek counselling. The CDC later updated its warning to advise that products containing THC “play a role in the outbreak.” Commercially available e-liquids contain a mixture of nicotine, flavourings, propylene glycol (PG) and vegetable glycerine (VG). Even those most critical of vaping would likely agree that commercial e-liquids are far less harmful than combusted tobacco. ‘THC oils’, however, use a different carrier, likely MCT or coconut oil. Lipid oils are potentially incredibly harmful when vaporised. Oil should never be vaped. Legitimate e-liquid manufacturers are aware of this and would never be associated with such products. It’s also possible that some of these black-market oils contain synthetic cannabinoids. These dangerous compounds are designed to mimic the effects of cannabis but have been linked to severe illnesses and deaths over the past few years. On August 12, the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) issued an alert warning of a ‘cluster’ of at least seven healthy adults being hospitalised with symptoms of severe acute pulmonary disease. All seven of the cases were linked to black-market THC vapes, according to Nancy Gerking, assistant director of public health of Kings County. And on September 4, the StarTribune reported that all eight of the interviewed Minnesota patients hospitalised for severe respiratory illnesses reported using an illegal THC product. Richard Danila, epidemiology program manager for the Minnesota Department of Health, said: “You can think about how difficult this investigation is. You have a 17-year-old in the ICU. Are they going to tell you they used an illegal product? Are they going to tell you they used an illegal product when mom or dad are standing in the same room?” However, even if some of the cases can be attributed to e-cigarette products ‘acquired from unknown or unauthorized (i.e., “street”) sources’, as the CDC alert suggested, this is surely a red flag of what could happen if flavour bans and excessive regulation push vaping underground and force an e-cigarette black-market to flourish. Finally has nobody stopped to ask the most obvious question about this vape-related panic? Surely if there was something inherently dangerous about using commercially-available e-cigarette products then why are similar cases not being reported throughout the world? There seems to be a very large and powerful anti-vaping lobby in the USA and this panic is a classic example of where the vaping hate brigade are refusing to let the facts get in the way of a good vaping scare story. VM25 77