Propylene glycol in e cigarettes might keep us healthy, says researchers
Published on November 4, 2009
According to the Centers for Disease Control, during 2000-2004,
"An estimated 443,000 persons in the United States died prematurely each
year from smoking or exposure to secondhand smoke. During 2001-2004,
the average annual smoking-attributable health-care expenditures
nationwide were approximately $96 billion. When combined with
productivity losses of $97 billion, the total economic burden of smoking
is approximately $193 billion per year."
Comparing the health
risks of tobacco smoking to the Swine Flu brings out some interesting
and thought provoking statistics. According to President Obama's Council
of Advisors on Science and Technology on H1N1, "A plausible scenario is
that the epidemic could cause between 30,000 and 90,000 deaths in the
United States." That puts the comparison of real deaths of 443,000
smokers to a "war games guess" of 30,000 to 90,000 for the H1N1
influenza for which the government recently declared a Health Emergency.
That declaration and the shortage of the H1N1 vaccine has caused a
panic in the U.S.
No study or statistic has been offered that
points to the Swine Flu as being more deadly than tobacco cigarettes in
causing death, yet a disproportional effort in preventative measures are
currently being channeled to defend against a lower risk health issue.
Toxic tobacco smoke contains many additional chemicals, including carbon
monoxide and tar which is a sticky substance that accumulates in the
lungs, causing lung cancer and respiratory distress. Tobacco is the
leading cause of preventable death in the world and is responsible for
more than 5 million deaths each year.
What the flu vaccine is to
H1N1 as a preventative, the electronic cigarette may be for the tobacco
smoker. An electronic cigarette is a futuristic advancement in science
that makes it look, feel, and taste like a tobacco cigarette, as the
user duplicates the mechanical motions. It expels an almost odorless
water vapor that looks like smoke, but isn't. The e cigarettes are
battery-powered with a cartridge that typically contains nicotine in
various levels (or none), propylene glycol and tobacco flavoring. In
their October briefing, Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) in the United
Kingdom released a favorable position on electronic cigarettes.
Propylene
glycol, the primary ingredient in the electronic cigarette cartridge,
may be a powerful deterrent against pneumonia, influenza, and other
respiratory diseases when vaporized and inhaled according to a study by
Dr. Oswald Hope Robertson. Decades before the e cigarette was invented, a
study was conducted by Dr. Robertson of the University of Chicago's
Billings Hospital in 1942 on inhalation of vaporized propylene glycol in
laboratory mice. A more in-depth article was printed in the 1942 issue
of TIME Magazine http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,932876,00.html for November 16th. "Dr. Robertson placed groups of mice in a chamber
and sprayed its air first with propylene glycol, then with influenza
virus. All the mice lived. Then he sprayed the chamber with virus alone.
All the mice died."
The researchers also found that "the
propylene glycol itself was a potent germicide. One part of glycol in
2,000,000 parts of air would--within a few seconds--kill concentrations
of air-suspended pneumococci, streptococci and other bacteria numbering
millions to the cubic foot."
Clinical trials on electronic
cigarettes containing propylene glycol were carried out in New Zealand
by Dr. Murray Laugeson of Health New Zealand and can be found on the
website of SS Choice LLC at http://www.eCigarettesChoice.com under the tab "Media Coverage." Far from posing a threat to our health,
the propylene glycol in e cigarettes might just keep us healthy.
Further studies should be done on the effects of propylene glycol to
determine if it can be used successfully as a virus prevention tool.
Wouldn't it be wonderful if the best flu preventative was right under
our noses all this time?
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