Health
E-cigarettes compromise the immune system: Study
New York, Feb 5
E-cigarettes compromise the
immune system in the lungs and generate some of the same potentially
dangerous chemicals found in traditional nicotine cigarettes, says a
team of researchers including an Indian-origin scientist.
"Our
findings suggest that e-cigarettes are not neutral in terms of the
effects on the lungs," said senior author Shyam Biswal, professor at the
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in the US.
E-cigarettes
are an emerging public health concern, as they gain popularity among
current and former smokers as well as those who have never smoked,
including teenagers.
The perception that e-cigarettes pose little
health risk is so entrenched that some smokers, including those with
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), are switching from
cigarettes to e-cigarettes, the researchers noted.
"We have observed that they increase the susceptibility to respiratory infections in the mouse models," Biswal noted.
For
the study, researchers divided the mice into two groups: one was
exposed to e-cigarette vapour in an inhalation chamber in amounts that
approximated actual human e-cigarette inhalation for two weeks, while
the other group was just exposed to air.
The mice exposed to
e-cigarette vapour were significantly more likely to develop compromised
immune responses to both the viral and the bacterial infections, the
researchers found.
As part of their study, the researchers also
determined that e-cigarette vapour contains "free radicals," known
toxins found in cigarette smoke and air pollution.
Free radicals are highly reactive agents that can damage DNA or other molecules within cells, resulting in cell death.
The findings appeared in the journal PLOS ONE.