Vaping dangerous for elderly due to higher pneumonia risk: Study

09 Feb 2018

1

Vaping is dangerous for the elderly due to the higher  risk of deadly pneumonia, according to new research.

Researchers have found in a study that vapour from electronic cigarettes could be as bad as traditional tobacco or even vehicle exhaust at making harmful bacteria stick to the airways, which increases chances of the inflammatory lung condition.

As per tests conducted at Queen Mary University of London, on both humans and mice, the effect was present in both nicotine and non-nicotine e-cigarettes.

The researchers studied the effects of vaping on a molecule produced by the cells lining the airways called PAFR (platelet-activating factor receptor), which, as per earlier research, was shown to help bugs stick to the nose, throat and lungs.

The team studied the cells lining the nose of 17 regular e-cigarette users for one hour following vaping, and found the tripling of PAFR levels as against normal levels.

The team suggests that people, who run a high risk of contracting pneumonia consider using nicotine patches or gum as alternative means of giving up traditional cigarettes.

The study included experiments in vitro with human cells, and in vivo with mice and human subjects and in both the in vitro cell tests as also the human studies, the researchers found three-fold elevation of PAFR levels on airway cells.

When the researchers later introduced pneumococcal bacteria to the airways of PAFR-elevated mice, a higher volume of bacteria was found to stick to the respiratory tract of the animals.

"Together, these results suggest that vaping makes the airways more vulnerable to bacteria sticking to airway lining cells," says lead researcher Jonathan Grigg.

"If this occurs when a vaper gets exposed to the pneumococcal bacterium, this could increase the risk of infection."

Latest articles

The 35-minute revolution: How China’s electric trucks outpaced the West

The 35-minute revolution: How China’s electric trucks outpaced the West

Pieter Elbers resigns as IndiGo CEO following winter of mass cancellations

Pieter Elbers resigns as IndiGo CEO following winter of mass cancellations

The new Silk Road is a fiber-optic cable: The rise of digital fortresses

The new Silk Road is a fiber-optic cable: The rise of digital fortresses

The silicon boardroom: Why 2026 is the year of the agentic reality check

The silicon boardroom: Why 2026 is the year of the agentic reality check

German startup Polarise plans 30-megawatt AI data center to boost sovereign control

German startup Polarise plans 30-megawatt AI data center to boost sovereign control

Oil sinks 7% as Trump predicts Middle East de-escalation

Oil sinks 7% as Trump predicts Middle East de-escalation

European truckmakers face “eat our lunch” moment as low-cost Chinese electric rigs arrive

European truckmakers face “eat our lunch” moment as low-cost Chinese electric rigs arrive

Anthropic sues to block Pentagon blacklist, warns of multibillion-dollar revenue collapse

Anthropic sues to block Pentagon blacklist, warns of multibillion-dollar revenue collapse

Ex-Meta AI chief Yann LeCun’s AMI raises $1.03 billion for alternative AI approach

Ex-Meta AI chief Yann LeCun’s AMI raises $1.03 billion for alternative AI approach