Tag: health

  • Vaping and ED Study has Several Potential Data Flaws

    Vaping and ED Study has Several Potential Data Flaws

    It appears there’s another negative consequence of vaping that may not be true. Alongside bone damage, depression and smoke, vapers can add erectile dysfunction to list of medical maladies supported by faulty research, according to the American Council on Science and Health. Major media outlets have broadcast the results of the suspect study globally.

    Credit: Catalin Pop

    A major issue with the ED study is that participants were classified as current someday (“i.e., not every day or occasional”) or daily vapers, or smokers if they consumed cigarettes “every day or some days.” Beyond this self-reported information, the researchers didn’t know how much or which e-liquids the vapers in their study used, nor did they know how many cigarettes each smoker consumed.

    “This is a common problem in vaping research: e-cigarette use is defined so broadly that there’s no way to establish a dose-response relationship between vaping and the health outcome in question,” Cameron English writes.

    Men were similarly classified as having ED based on a 1-item question: “Many men experience problems with sexual intercourse. How would you describe your ability to get and keep an erection adequate for satisfactory intercourse?” As a result, the study may have erroneously identified participants as having ED who actually don’t or missed others with mild symptoms. The researchers summed up the problem with these data gaps towards the end of the paper, writing: “… the analyses were based on both self-reported covariate data, ENDS use status, and ED status, all of which are subject to misclassification, recall, and social desirability bias …”

    The recent study, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, found those who reported daily e-cig use were 2.2 times more likely to report having erectile dysfunction compared to men who had never vaped, regardless of their other risk factors. In a smaller sample of men younger than 65 with normal BMIs and no history of cardiovascular disease, the trend persisted: vapers were 2.4 times more likely to experience ED compared to non-vapers.

    Additionally, another critical issue is that the study only provided a snapshot of people who reported vaping and experiencing ED. “There’s nothing wrong with this cross-sectional study design; it can help answer a number of important questions, but it’s not useful if you’re trying to assess the long-term risks of a given exposure, vaping in this case,” English states. “To highlight one potential issue, did the participants develop ED before they began vaping? If so, that means electronic cigarettes aren’t to blame, though this study can’t account for that possibility.”

    The researchers also did not question whether other factors contribute to the frequency of ED reported in the present study, such as smoking combustible cigarettes. “Nevertheless, this study failed to detect an association between cigarette smoking and ED, also when accounting for current daily smoking versus nondaily smoking (data not shown),” the researchers wrote.

    However, nicotine has long been called a factor in erectile disfunction. Men who smoked more than 20 cigarettes daily had a 60 percent higher risk of erectile dysfunction, compared to men who never smoked, according to the American Heart Association (AHA). Smoking, according to the AHA, and erectile dysfunction have often been associated — individually — with plaque build-up in the arteries, called atherosclerosis.

  • Studies Show Vaping Reduces Smoking Related Illnesses

    Studies Show Vaping Reduces Smoking Related Illnesses

    By Tim Sandle

    Three recent studies demonstrate the potential for improved health effects that can come from the use of e-cigarettes, when such vaping products are used on a permanent basis and the use of all tobacco products is halted.

    Credit: TTI

    The arguments used to promote the use of electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) and other vaping products is with a reduction in the risk of cardiovascular disease or cancer, and as a strategy to decrease the addiction to conventional cigarettes.

    Other smoking related diseases include risk of lung disease, including lung cancer and emphysema. The research areas that support this have been provided by trade site Vapor Solo. In relation to the research, a review commissioned by Public Health England concluded that e-cigarettes were 95 percent less harmful than tobacco.

    The first set of research is from the University of Dundee, U.K., drawing on an extensive clinical trial into the cardiovascular effect

    CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH
    The second area of research relates to a trial that found that patients (114 in total) who switched from smoking to vaping experience a 1.5 percentage point improvement with their blood vessel function, as demonstrated across a four week period. This improvement was as measured against conventional cigarette users. Heart health was assessed using a Fibromuscular Dysplasia (FMD) test, to assess how far a blood vessel opens.

    Further studies from the research team are underway to measure the effects over a longer time period across which the broader effects of cardiovascular health can be assessed, including the risk of heart attacks. The results are supported by a second study from the Vanderbilt University Medical Center, U.S.

    This research strand showed that heavy cigarette smokers with at least a 20 pack-year smoking history can reduce their risk of cardiovascular disease by 39 percent within five years if they switch to e-cigarettes or quit altogether. In a follow-up letter to The Lancet, the researchers “estimate that e-cigarettes are 95% less harmful to users than smoking. Or, as we prefer, smoking is estimated to be twenty times more harmful to users than vaping e-cigarettes.”

    CANCER DEVELOPMENT
    A similar investigation, this time into the risk of developing cancers, was conducted between the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Roswell Park Cancer Institute, U.S., and the University College London., U.K. This study was slightly larger, taking in 181 smokers in order to assess the long-term effects of vaping.

    The smoker group included users of electronic cigarettes and conventional tobacco products. To determine the health variance, those involved in the study volunteered to provide saliva, breath, and urine samples. Qualitative questionnaires were also completed.

    The data indicated that levels of carcinogens (including tobacco specific nitrosamines, which are one of the most important carcinogens in tobacco formed from nicotine) taken from former smokers who had switched to e-cigarettes were significantly lower compared with regular users of smoking tobacco products.

    People who used both types of products, so-termed ‘combination smokers’ did not experience any significant health improvements. The third study was published in the peer-reviewed journal: Annals of Internal Medicine, titled “Nicotine, Carcinogen, and Toxin Exposure in Long-Term E-Cigarette and Nicotine Replacement Therapy Users: A Cross-sectional Study.”

    This article first appeared on Newshour.com.