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You can search this site or the web for topics of interest that I may have written (use Dr Simone and topic).  “We provide truthful information without emotion or influence from the medical establishment, pharmaceutical industry, national organizations, special interest groups or government agencies.” Charles B Simone, M.MS., M.D.

THE HARMS OF VAPING

https://tinyurl.com/3338kda2 Full Report 

https://www.simonesuperenergy.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/The-Harms-of-Vaping.wav

Vaping is often marketed as a cleaner alternative to smoking, but growing evidence shows that e-cigarettes can damage the lungs, heart, blood vessels, and developing brain — particularly in adolescents and young adults. While some adults use vaping as a smoking-cessation tool, vaping is not harmless, and long-term health effects are still emerging. And the flavored ones are more addictive.

Major Health Risks

1. Lung Injury and Respiratory Disease

Vaping aerosols contain ultrafine particles, volatile organic compounds, heavy metals, and chemical flavorings that can injure lung tissue.

A severe vaping-associated illness known as EVALI caused thousands of hospitalizations in the United States. Symptoms included:

    • Shortness of breath

    • Chest pain

    • Cough

    • Fever

    • Respiratory failure

    • Collapsed Lungs

Even beyond EVALI, studies show vaping may worsen:

    • Asthma

    • Chronic bronchitis symptoms

    • Airway inflammation

    • Reduced lung function

Research has linked certain flavoring chemicals such as diacetyl to bronchiolar injury sometimes called “popcorn lung.”

2. Nicotine Addiction and Brain Effects

Most vaping products contain nicotine, a highly addictive substance and the industry has engineered ways to deliver more of it. Some popular vapes can have the nicotine of 600 cigarettes.  A can of pouches can have 2 times the nicotine of a pack of cigarettes.  The gaol is the same – RAPID ADDICTION

In adolescents and young adults, nicotine exposure may affect:

    • Attention – Nicotine interferes with your brain’s ability to pay attention and increases learning difficulties.

    • Learning

    • Memory

    • Depression and Anxiety – Nicotine can deepen depression and amplify anxiety.  It may seem like your vape or pouch brings relief, but it’s really just the pausing of withdrawal symptoms.

    • Mood regulation – Nicotine can rewire your brain’s reward system, which can increase mood swings and make you feel super ragey between uses

    • Impulse control

The adolescent brain continues developing into the mid-20s, making youth especially vulnerable to addiction.

3. Cardiovascular Harm

Nicotine and aerosol chemicals may:

    • Increase heart rate and blood pressure

    • Damage blood vessels

    • Promote oxidative stress and inflammation

    • Increase risk factors for heart disease

Emerging evidence suggests vaping can impair endothelial function similarly to traditional cigarette smoking.

4. Toxic Chemical Exposure

Vape aerosols may contain:

    • Formaldehyde

    • Acetaldehyde

    • Acrolein

    • Heavy metals such as nickel, lead, and tin

    • Fine particulate matter

Heating coils and high-temperature aerosolization can generate toxic degradation products.

5. Poisoning and Accidental Exposure

Liquid nicotine can be dangerous if swallowed or absorbed through the skin, especially in children. Accidental poisoning cases involving vape liquids have increased with widespread e-cigarette use.

6. Gateway Concerns in Youth

Multiple observational studies have found that adolescents who vape are more likely later to experiment with combustible cigarettes or other nicotine products, though causation remains debated.

What Major Health Organizations Say

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

The CDC warns that no youth should use e-cigarettes and that pregnant women and non-smokers should avoid vaping.

American Heart Association

The AHA states that e-cigarettes are not risk-free and raise concerns about cardiovascular and pulmonary toxicity.

World Health Organization

WHO has stated that e-cigarettes are harmful to health and are not safe.


 

Health Metric

Vaping Impact (vs. Non-Users)

Myocardial Infarction

53% Increased Odds

Heart Failure

19% Increased Risk

Asthma

39% Higher Odds

Cancer Indicators

DNA damage & Epigenetic changes detected

Concise Policy Statement

Given rising evidence of pulmonary, cardiovascular, neurologic, and addiction-related harms — especially among youth — public health policy should prioritize prevention of adolescent nicotine exposure, transparent labeling of vaping products, tighter regulation of flavorings and marketing practices, and continued long-term safety research on e-cigarettes.

Key Medical References

  1. New England Journal of Medicine
    Layden JE et al. Pulmonary Illness Related to E-Cigarette Use in Illinois and Wisconsin. N Engl J Med. 2020.
  2. Journal of the American College of Cardiology
    Qasim H et al. Short-Term E-Cigarette Exposure Increases the Risk of Thrombogenesis and Enhances Platelet Function in Mice. JACC. 2018.
  3. Circulation
    Bhatta DN, Glantz SA. Association of E-Cigarette Use With Respiratory Disease and Cardiovascular Disease. Circulation. 2019.
  4. JAMA
    Goriounova NA, Mansvelder HD. Short- and Long-Term Consequences of Nicotine Exposure During Adolescence for Prefrontal Cortex Neuronal Network Function. JAMA Pediatrics. 2012.
  5. The Lancet
    Marques P et al. Electronic Cigarettes and Health: A Systematic Review. Lancet Respiratory Medicine.
  6. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
    Public Health Consequences of E-Cigarettes. 2018.

 

© 2026 C. B. Simone, M.MS., M.D.