Introducing the e-Cigarette, Smokeless Nicotine
via NY Times
FALL RIVER, Mass. — During 34 years of smoking, Carolyn Smeaton has tried countless ways to reduce her three-pack-a-day habit, including a nicotine patch, nicotine gum and a prescription drug. But stop-smoking aids always failed her.
Then, having watched a TV infomercial at her home here, Ms. Smeaton tried an electronic cigarette, which claimed to be a less dangerous way to feed her addiction. The battery-powered device she bought online delivered an odorless dose of nicotine and flavoring without cigarette tar or additives, and produced a vapor mist nearly identical in appearance to tobacco smoke.
“I feel like this could save my life,” said Ms. Smeaton, 47, who has cut her tobacco smoking to a pack and a half daily, supplemented by her e-cigarette.
That electronic cigarettes are unapproved by the government and virtually unstudied has not deterred thousands of smokers from flocking to mall kiosks and the Internet to buy them. And because they produce no smoke, they can be used in workplaces, restaurants and airports. One distributor is aptly named Smoking Everywhere.
The reaction of medical authorities and antismoking groups has ranged from calls for testing to skepticism to outright hostility. Opponents say the safety claims are more rumor than anything else, since the components of e-cigarettes have never been tested for safety.
In fact, the Food and Drug Administration has already refused entry to dozens of shipments of e-cigarettes coming into the country, mostly from China, the chief maker of them, where manufacture began about five years ago. The F.D.A. took similar action in 1989, refusing shipments of an earlier, less appealing version, Favor Smoke-Free Cigarettes.
“These appear to be unapproved drug device products,” said Karen Riley, a spokeswoman for the agency, “and as unapproved products they can’t enter the United States.”
But enough of the e-cigarettes have made their way into the country that they continue to proliferate online and in the malls.
For $100 to $150 or so, a user can buy a starter kit including a battery-powered cigarette and replaceable cartridges that typically contain nicotine (though cartridges can be bought without it), flavoring and propylene glycol, a liquid whose vaporizing produces the smokelike mist. When a user inhales, a sensor heats the cartridge. The flavorings include tobacco, menthol and cherry, and the levels of nicotine vary by cartridge.
Propylene glycol is used in antifreeze, and also to create artificial smoke or fog in theatrical productions. The F.D.A. has classified it as an additive that is “generally recognized as safe” for use in food. But when asked whether inhaling it was safe, Dr. Richard D. Hurt, director of the Nicotine Dependence Center at the Mayo Clinic, said, “I don’t think so, but I’m not sure anyone knows for sure.”
Of the e-cigarettes themselves, Dr. Hurt added: “We basically don’t know anything about them. They’ve never been tested for safety or efficacy to help people stop smoking.”
Public health officials also worry that the devices’ fruit flavors, novelty and ease of access may entice children.
“It looks like a cigarette and is marketed as a cigarette,” said Jonathan P. Winickoff, an associate professor at the Massachusetts General Hospital for Children and chairman of the American Academy of Pediatrics Tobacco Consortium. “There’s nothing that prevents youth from getting addicted to nicotine.”
Sales and use of electronic cigarettes are already illegal on safety grounds in Australia and Hong Kong, and some other countries regulate them as medicinal devices or forbid their advertising. So far the United States has focused only on stopping them at the border, although Senator Frank R. Lautenberg, Democrat of New Jersey, has asked the drug agency to take them off the market until they can be tested.
Distributors of electronic cigarettes fear that a bill making its way through Congress that would give the F.D.A. the authority to regulate tobacco could be used to put them out of business as well. The bill has passed the House and could be taken up by the Senate this week.
The only American study of electronic cigarettes, now under way at Virginia Commonwealth University and financed by the National Cancer Institute, deals not with the kind of safety questions raised by propylene glycol but rather with the amount of nicotine processed by the bodies of the products’ users.
Another study, conducted this year at the University of Auckland in New Zealand and financed by Ruyan, an electronic cigarette company, shows that users typically receive 10 percent to 18 percent of the nicotine delivered by a tobacco cigarette.
Smoking Everywhere, a Florida-based distributor of electronic cigarettes, sued the F.D.A on April 28, claiming that the agency did not have jurisdiction to refuse the imported devices.
“The F.D.A. has the power to regulate Nicorette gum and the like because it is marketed as a smoking cessation product,” said Kip Schwartz, a lawyer for Smoking Everywhere. But the company says its products are a cigarette alternative for adult enjoyment and make no claims to help smokers quit, Mr. Schwartz added.
Matt Salmon, a spokesman for the Electronic Cigarette Association, which represents six distributors, said e-cigarettes delivered nothing more than a mixture of nicotine and water vapor and emitted “no carcinogens.” The association declined to give sales figures, but said that “hundreds of thousands” of people used the products and that the average age of those users was the mid-40s.
“It’s a really good alternative for people who smoke tobacco,” Mr. Salmon said.
Edwin Schwab, who quit smoking regular cigarettes last year after trying e-cigarettes, likes them so much he has started selling them at a mall kiosk in Providence, R.I.
Mr. Schwab took his e-smoke along when he went out one night, he said, “and when everyone was smoking outside in the cold, I just stood in the warm bar, smoking.”







Cigarette smoking features extensively already been recognized as the real cause of many long term health disease. Lung illness, jaws most cancers, bloodstream melanoma along with every health …SmokeStik
There are a lot of companies now that are doing no nicotine cartridges. It would be a great way to get the hand to mouth motion and the the “smoke” without the nicotine.
Virginia Commonwealth University is doing a study on nicotine delivery, which in my opinion is idiotic as we already know that much less nicotine is absorbed into the body with Ecigs. This lowered amount of absorbed nicotine is not a bad thing as a big part of the habit is the action of smoking, which it also replicates… The safety factor should be the focus of studies around the world as to debunk governments claims of the product being untested and no research to back up claims. In Australia, Ecigs are legal but nicotine liquid is not legal to resell, one must personally import their own nicotine from overseas suppliers. AustralianEcig.com sells starter-kits with eliquid containing zero nicotine, the user must import and mix a little into their eliquids to have the benefit of nicotine in their Ecig. The mentioned site explains all to any Aussies wanting to know more..
It remains to be seen whether the electronic cigarette is a good alternative to cigarettes. It still contains nicotine which is a poison and the few tests that have been conducted by the FDA have discovered some toxins felt to be carcinogenic or cancer causing, although not as many as burning tobacco.
The point is, if the use of electronic cigarettes is not short-term you are simply substituting one nicotine addiction with another.
It would be nice if the govenment would allow us to have a healthier alternative to smoking that really works and does not require us to totally give up nicotine until WE are ready. The problem with prescription NRT is that you are at the mercy of drug companies, doctors being willing to prescribe and the added expense. Because this has no obvious major health risks they have no justification to tax the eciggarette as insanely as they do tobacco. It seems eciggarettes are a rational replacement that should continue to be allowed whether you are wanting to quit or see it as a safer long term solution. Of course this is presuming that the govenment does have an interest in saving lives as opposed to just overtaxing a minority.
“The FDA will never approve these “smokeless” cigs. Does one really think that they are worried about the adverse side effects? Or the chemical content? If there is up to 4,ooo chemicals in a cigarette, why are cigarettes still available? Because they are worried about the REVENUE that cigarettes produce. So until they can TAX these e-cigs they will not be approved. Once the tax goes into effect…..they will be a “safer” alternative. Yeah Right……..
Anonymous said this on July 27, 2009 at 3:35 pm”
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that is absolutely right
does the nicotine permeate the air?
Does nicotine filter through the air. I am looking for a cigarette that does not permiate nicotine into the air. We have a family member with severe breathing problems who can not visit because we have a smoker in the house.
What do you recommend.
The FDA will never approve these “smokeless” cigs. Does one really think that they are worried about the adverse side effects? Or the chemical content? If there is up to 4,ooo chemicals in a cigarette, why are cigarettes still available? Because they are worried about the REVENUE that cigarettes produce. So until they can TAX these e-cigs they will not be approved. Once the tax goes into effect…..they will be a “safer” alternative. Yeah Right……..
Blucigs are a great alternative to gums and patches. Try them and you will not be disappointed.
This post is really informative. If you can’t leave your smoking habit immediately you can switch to the smokeless electronic cigarette or e-cigs with which you can really save yourself and your surroundings from the risks that are associated with smoking any traditional cigarette.
I sure wish they’d do testing already and make some announcements. Personally, I’m a non-smoker, and one who supports bans on public smoking. However, I did try smoking about 10 years back. And though it may sound too Clintonesque, I never inhaled but once. I just liked puffing the menthols, basically. If they determine these are generally safe, or at least safe enough to be sold like alcohol or whatever, I’d love to buy some. A lot of the companies out there make a completely nicotine free version, and those are the ones I want. My husband has put up a fuss to me buying some until there’s some sort of official ‘word’ on them. He’s very suspicious. So if the e-cig companies can help get the testing done and get the word out, the ones that sell the nicotine free stuff will have one more customer.