Doctor warns of health risks linked to nicotine-free vaping

You may have swapped cigarettes for a vape thinking itโ€™s saferโ€”especially if itโ€™s nicotine-free. But new research reveals that even nicotine-free vaping can damage blood vessels, raising the risk of heart disease and circulation problems

Unlike cigarettes, vapes donโ€™t produce smoke or tar. Instead, they heat a liquidโ€”usually a mix of propylene glycol and vegetable glycerinโ€”into an aerosol you inhale. While these ingredients are safe to eat, inhaling them can harm your lungs and airways, causing coughing, shortness of breath, and inflammation.

Flavorings add another layer of risk. Chemicals like diacetyl (linked to popcorn lung), benzaldehyde, and trace heavy metals from vape coils are all found in e-cigarettesโ€”even those without nicotine

A 2024 study compared traditional cigarettes, nicotine vapes, and nicotine-free vapes. All three impaired vascular function. Nicotine vapes had the worst effect, but nicotine-free ones werenโ€™t far behind. The takeaway? The base ingredients and flavorings themselves are harmful.

Dr. Marianna Nabbout, one of the researchers, warned that if a single vape session can immediately impact your blood vessels, long-term use could lead to serious vascular disease.

Worse still, vaping is drawing in peopleโ€”especially youthโ€”who might never have smoked otherwise. According to Johns Hopkins, over 2 million U.S. students used e-cigarettes in 2021, with most choosing flavored ones.

If you thought vaping was harmless, this study is a wake-up call.

What do you think? Share this to help raise awareness about the hidden risks of vaping


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