4.5 Review

Biological Toxicity of the Compositions in Electronic-Cigarette on Cardiovascular System

Journal

JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages 371-376

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12265-020-10060-1

Keywords

E-cigarette; Cardiovascular; Toxicity; Biology

Funding

  1. NIH [HL115195-01, HL137962, HL 142291]

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The use of electronic cigarettes among youth in the USA is a growing public health crisis, with unknown biological impacts on various organ systems, particularly the cardiovascular system. The diverse chemical ingredients in e-cigs, including nicotine and other chemicals, raise concerns about health risks.
Using electronic cigarette (e-cig) among youth is becoming a critical public health crisis in the USA. However, the biological impacts of the e-cig on multiple organ systems, especially in the cardiovascular system, are largely unknown. Unlike conventional tobacco, e-cig combines various chemical ingredients including nicotine and other add-on non-nicotine chemicals, such as the solvents (propylene glycol and/or vegetable glycerin) and flavoring chemicals, which dramatically increases the diversity of the potential implications. The recent outbreak of e-cig vaping-related tragic deaths in youth and multiple hospitalized patients raised a question on the safety of e-cig use and led to an urgent need for the knowledge of the health risk of the e-cig compositions. Therefore, in the review, we summarized the latest findings from both human and animal studies on the potential cardiovascular toxicological effects of e-cig on the cardiovascular system in terms of the systemic physiological implications and the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved.

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