Many people believe that Vaping is less harmful than smoking. Although E-cigarette does not contain all the pollutants in tobacco smoke, it is still unsafe, so will the lungs of vaping turn black? Let's take a look.
Do vaping lungs turn black? Will it be fibrotic?
Yes, the darkening of the lungs is caused by the tar in cigarettes, and the ingredients of E-cigarettes are made up of food-grade vegetable oil (VG) and propylene glycol (PG) and C10H14N2. This e-cigarette does not contain tar, so it does not darken the lungs.
These soots, dust, and particles are absorbed by inhalation into the alveoli and mucous membranes, accumulating a large amount of incompletely burned carbon slag and dust for a long time, forming the lungs. It's as if you're walking through thick smoke with a white mask, and the mask is going to be pitch black when you walk over. The lungs of a smoker are like the chimney of a coal stove, and the chimney of a winter is lit to clear the black slag of the basin, not to mention the perennial smoking.
Compared to cigarettes, e-cigarettes contain less dust and particles, so they do not directly cause the lungs to darken.
But e-cigarettes are also harmful, and there have been many experiments that have proven that e-cigarettes can cause some damage or effects to the lungs. But like I said, there are no other potentially fatal side effects yet, but there hasn't been enough research to determine what they are. In some cases, the accumulation of gas in the lungs due to the inhalation of the mist can lead to pneumonia, making the person more susceptible to other diseases.
Since e-cigarette gas does not contain harmful substances such as tar in tobacco, it will not cause blackening of the lungs, but the long-term effects of e-cigarettes on human health are not very clear, therefore, at present, smokers and non-smokers should not use e-cigarettes.
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