If you vape THC, are you risking your life?

4214 views 11 replies
Reply to Topic
wisepowder

Age: 2023
Total Posts: 0
Points: 10

Location:
,
Starting last summer, very sick patients began showing up in emergency rooms all over the country with similar symptoms — mainly,
they couldn’t breathe.To get more news about wholesale vape pens, you can visit univapo official website.
The outbreak peaked in September and has since slowed considerably. By mid-December, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
reported, a total of 2,506 patients in all 50 states had been
hospitalized for the condition, christened EVALI (e-cigarette or vaping
associated lung injury). Fifty-four people died, most of them otherwise
healthy young adults.
What soon became clear, thanks to epidemiologists, medical sleuths and the relentless reporting of the cannabis news website Leafly, was
that there was a link between the illness and vitamin E acetate, a
viscous liquid that can be swallowed or used topically in cosmetic
creams.
Starting last summer, very sick patients began showing up in emergency rooms all over the country with similar symptoms — mainly,
they couldn’t breathe.
The outbreak peaked in September and has since slowed considerably. By mid-December, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
reported, a total of 2,506 patients in all 50 states had been
hospitalized for the condition, christened EVALI (e-cigarette or vaping
associated lung injury). Fifty-four people died, most of them otherwise
healthy young adults.
What soon became clear, thanks to epidemiologists, medical sleuths and the relentless reporting of the cannabis news website Leafly, was
that there was a link between the illness and vitamin E acetate, a
viscous liquid that can be swallowed or used topically in cosmetic
creams.
“We are confident that vitamin E acetate is strongly linked to the EVALI outbreak,” the CDC’s principal deputy director, Anne Schuchat,
told reporters in a telephone briefing Dec. 20. “I want to stress that
this does not mean that there are no other substances in e-cigarettes or
vaping products that have or are capable of causing lung injury.”
Where, exactly, were cannabis users getting these tainted cartridges?Last week, the CDC announced that a survey of 809 patients in
Illinois, Utah and Wisconsin found that most — 78% — obtained their
THC-containing products from “informal” sources like friends, family or
dealers, or purchased it online.
A sliver of them —16% — said they got their cannabis from brick-and-mortar commercial sources, like dispensaries, smoke or vape
shops and pop-up stores.
Posted 25 Nov 2020

Reply to Topic