Skip to content
TVCTVCTVC
Login
Cart 0

Dr. Farsalinos refutes study that vapes contain toxic metals

Vapers have been left reeling this week by news that e-cigarette vapor contains toxic metals like arsenic, which can cause brain cancer or even death. The information comes from a recently released study by a Johns Hopkins doctor from the University of Baltimore, Maryland, who is known to be a strong opponent of vaping.

Professor Konstantinos Farsalinos of the Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center in Athens, Greece, knew of the flawed study and immediately spoke out to refute it.

The Johns Hopkins study, titled, Metal Constituents in E-Cigarette E-Liquids and Smoke Samples, was published on the Environmental Health Perspectives website before being widely circulated by the media. The entire study pointed to the results, a large amount of toxic metals were found in e-cigarette smoke.

It was these superficial words and rumors that angered Professor Farsalinos and millions of vapers. After carefully reading the entire study, Professor Farsalinos immediately posted a rebuttal to Johns Hopkins on Facebook and publicly denied the study's conclusions.

According to a study by Johns Hopkins, researchers were helped by 56 vapers using the same type of e-liquid. After analyzing the substances in the smoke, they recorded some metal components such as arsenic, chromium, manganese, nickel and lead. From there, they confirmed that the continuous absorption of toxic metals can cause people to develop dangerous cancers.

Professor Farsalinos's achievements with anti-vaping research

However, Professor Farsalinos, who has been conducting studies on e-cigarette smoke since 2011, firmly denies the other side's conclusions. He agrees that small amounts of lead and chromium can appear in vape smoke when inhaled at extremely high temperatures, but he also asserts that the "relatively large proportion" described by Johns Hopkims is completely false.

“For those still wondering about the study of metals in e-cigarettes, I have a word: the “large amounts” of metals mentioned in the study are measured in ug/kg. The chromium and lead components are so small, by my calculations, a person would have to vape over 100 ml a day to exceed the FDA standard for a smoked tobacco dose.”

“It appears the author has mistakenly applied the safe limit for exposure to the environment via inhalation to vapes. However, a person takes about 17,000 breaths a day, but only takes 400-600 puffs from an e-cigarette.”

This is not the first time Professor Farsalinos has spoken out against inaccurate studies and denied their conclusions. When the AUA (American Urological Association) released a study claiming that vaping causes bladder cancer, he responded and pointed out the unclear evidence used by the author.

Meanwhile, Professor Farsalinos also explained that some vape studies claim that e-cigarette smoke causes popcorn lung or contains high levels of formaldehyde. In all cases, he asserted that the anti-vaping study authors deliberately manipulated the data to reach negative conclusions.

Source: Matt Rowland - vapes.com

Translated by: The Vape Club

Leave a comment
Cart (0)

Your cart is currently empty.

Start Shopping