What’s in vapes? Toxins, heavy metals, maybe radioactive polonium

If you asked me what’s in e-cigarettes, disposable vapes or e-liquids, my short answer would be “we don’t fully know”.


The huge and increasing range of products and flavours on the market, changes to ingredients when they are heated or interact with each other, and inadequate labelling make this a complicated question to answer.


Analytical chemistry, including my own team’s research, gives some answers. But understanding the health impacts adds another level of complexity. E-cigarettes’ risk to health varies depending on many factors including which device or flavours are used, and how people use them.


So vapers just don’t know what they’re inhaling and cannot be certain of the health impacts.



What do we know?

Despite these complexities, there are some consistencies between what different laboratories find.

Ingredients include nicotine, flavouring chemicals, and the liquids that carry them – primarily propylene glycol and glycerine.

Concerningly, we also find volatile organic compounds, particulate matter and carcinogens (agents that can cause cancer), many of which we know are harmful.

Our previous research also found 2-chlorophenol in about half of e-liquids users buy to top-up re-fillable e-cigarettes. This is one example of a chemical with no valid reason to be there. Globally, it’s classified as “harmful if inhaled”. Its presence is likely due to contamination during manufacturing.

How about polonium?

One potential ingredient that has been in the news in recent weeks is radioactive polonium-210, the same substance used to assassinate former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko in 2006. The Queensland government is now testing vapes for it.

Polonium-210 can be found in traditional cigarettes and other tobacco products. That’s because tobacco plants absorb it and other radioactive materials from the soil, air and high-phosphate fertiliser.

Whether polonium-210 is found in aerosols produced by e-cigarettes remains to be seen. Although it is feasible if the glycerine in e-liquids comes from plants and similar fertilisers are used to grow them.





It’s not just the ingredients

Aside from their ingredients, the materials e-cigarette devices are made from can end up in our bodies.

Toxic metals and related substances such as arsenic, lead, chromium and nickel can be detected in both e-liquids and vapers’ urine, saliva and blood.

These substances can pose serious health risks (such as being carcinogenic). They can leach from several parts of an e-cigarette, including the heating coil, wires and soldered joints.



View attachment 27434
Chemicals from the device itself can end up in our blood, urine and saliva. Shutterstock



That’s not all

The process of heating e-liquids to create an inhalable aerosol also changes their chemical make-up to produce degradationproducts.


These include:
  • formaldehyde (a substance used to embalm dead bodies)
  • acetaldehyde (a key substance that contributes to a hangover after drinking alcohol)
  • acrolein (used as a chemical weapon in the first world war and now used as a herbicide).

These chemicals are often detected in e-cigarette samples. However due to different devices and how the samples are collected, the levels measured vary widely between studies.

Often, the levels are very low, leading to proponents of vaping arguing e-cigarettes are far safer than tobacco smoking.

But this argument does not acknowledge that many e-cigarette users (particularly adolescents) were or are not cigarette smokers, meaning a better comparison is between e-cigarette use and breathing “fresh” air.

An e-cigarette user is undoubtedly exposed to more toxins and harmful substances than a non-smoker. People who buy tobacco cigarettes are also confronted with a plethora of warnings about the hazards of smoking, while vapers generally are not.



How about labelling?

This leads to another reason why it’s impossible to tell what is in vapes – the lack of information, including warnings, on the label.

Even if labels are present, they don’t always reflect what’s in the product. Nicotine concentration of e-liquids is often quite different to what is on the label, and “nicotine-free” e-liquids often contain nicotine.

Products are also labelled with generic flavour names such as “berry” or “tobacco”. But there is no way for a user to know what chemicals have been added to make those “berry” or “tobacco” flavours or the changes in these chemicals that may occur with heating and/or interacting with other ingredients and the device components. “Berry” flavour alone could be made from more than 35 different chemicals.

Flavouring chemicals may be “food grade” or classified as safe-to-eat. However mixing them into e-liquids, heating and inhaling them is a very different type of exposure, compared to eating them.

One example is benzaldehyde (an almond flavouring). When this is inhaled, it impairs the immune function of lung cells. This could potentially reduce a vaper’s ability to deal with other inhaled toxins, or respiratory infections.

Benzaldehyde is one of only eight banned e-liquid ingredients in Australia. The list is so short because we don’t have enough information on the health effects if inhaled of other flavouring chemicals, and their interactions with other e-liquid ingredients.




Where to next?


For us to better assess the health risks of vapes, we need to learn more about:

  • what happens when flavour chemicals are heated and inhaled
  • the interactions between different e-liquid ingredients
  • what other contaminants may be present in e-liquids
  • new, potentially harmful, substances in e-cigarettes.
Finally, we need to know more about how people use e-cigarettes so we can better understand and quantify the health risks in the real world.


This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Alexander Larcombe, Associate Professor and Head of Respiratory Environmental Health, Telethon Kids Institute

 
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Lets shock the people who smoke something that isn't taxed into believing there are many nasties in what they are ingesting. I am not saying there isn't, but why doesn't someone step in produce safe vapes. It can after all remove the smokers form our midst and reduce secondary smoke related diseases. Also lets turn our attention to our food and foods that are imported and subject them to the same scrutiny. I wouldn't mind betting tat a lot of diseases are directly attributed to the crap that in most foods today. This doesn't include the pesticides and chemicals in our farmed produce as well. All the steroids given to livestock and poultry to produce a fitter fatter animal. Surely all this will have a great bearing on what is ails the western world today.
 
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Our 18 year old grandson uses vapes. He doesn’t listen to anything we say to him about the dangers. Young people think it’s cool. He started vaping at 15, a “friend” used to bring vapes to school and sell them to the younger kids. This so called friends mother and then older brother were buying them illegally from overseas and supplying the school kids. Unfortunately none of the younger kids would “dob” so they got away with it, and to my knowledge the whole family are now involved in supplying vapes to under age kids. Recently my 14 year old granddaughter got suspended from school after she and a friend got caught vaping in the toilets. My son told me there are a lot of stores in the small city he lives in that sell vapes to anyone who wants them, regardless of age. He tells me on the occasions he drives his kids to or from school that every 2nd kid is vaping as they walk to school, or as soon as they walk out of the school gates. All age kids at that.
 
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Our 18 year old grandson uses vapes. He doesn’t listen to anything we say to him about the dangers. Young people think it’s cool. He started vaping at 15, a “friend” used to bring vapes to school and sell them to the younger kids. This so called friends mother and then older brother were buying them illegally from overseas and supplying the school kids. Unfortunately none of the younger kids would “dob” so they got away with it, and to my knowledge the whole family are now involved in supplying vapes to under age kids. Recently my 14 year old granddaughter got suspended from school after she and a friend got caught vaping in the toilets. My son told me there are a lot of stores in the small city he lives in that sell vapes to anyone who wants them, regardless of age. He tells me on the occasions he drives his kids to or from school that every 2nd kid is vaping as they walk to school, or as soon as they walk out of the school gates. All age kids at that.
This is a very troubling situation, just as bad as selling other drugs to underage children.

Vapes like smoking cigarettes starts as a pier pressure habit. Knowing what these can do to their system means nothing at all to them. I have been of the opinion for many years now that young people have no regard for life & treat life as a cheap commodity. "If my stupidity takes my life tomorrow it will be no loss".

One question which came to mind about exhaled Vape smoke:- 'does it have the same affect on people as 2nd hand cigarette smoke?'
 
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Your reflections on the uncertainties of vape contents resonate deeply with my own journey. It's a perplexing landscape indeed, with a myriad of unknowns lurking in every puff. Amidst this ambiguity, I've found myself gravitating towards the simplicity of a disposable pod. While the research delves into the intricacies, I've opted for a sense of assurance in knowing that I'm making a choice that prioritizes my well-being. As the discourse continues, I navigate through with a firm belief in the importance of making informed decisions for my health.
 
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