NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) — Doctors at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt are seeing more and more kids and teens with lung and respiratory injuries from using e-cigarettes.
In the last six months, Vandy doctors have seen four cases of e-cigarette injuries.
“We are seeing patients with symptoms that seem out of the ordinary and appear more severe than a respiratory infection," said Jacob Kaslow, MD, a second-year pediatric pulmonary fellow at Children’s Hospital.
There were 94 possible cases of severe lung illness associated with vaping reported in 14 states from June 28, 2019, to August 15, 2019, according to the Center for Disease Control.
The CDC recently announced that it is joining state health departments in Wisconsin, Illinois, California, Indiana and Minnesota to investigate severe pulmonary disease among people who use e-cigarettes, primarily among adolescents and young adults.
Kaslow has seen patients for shortness of breath, severe pneumonia, lung collapse, coughing up blood and complete respiratory failure, often placing them in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. Some patients have recovered while others will have irreversible lung disease.
“We are all working to figure out what we are truly dealing with,” Kaslow said. “The use of e-cigarettes can make a common infection more severe because the body’s immune system is affected. It is so important that our patients are truthful when we ask about the use of this device.”
In a recent case, knowing the patient used e-cigarettes allowed the medical team to change the management of care and led to a significant improvement in the patient’s outcome.
Doctors have had to change the way they take in patients. Officials say it's common place to ask teenagers and young adults about smoking and exposure to smoke. The pulmonology team has also included questions about e-cigarette use.
Kaslow said he fears the number of e-cigarette lung cases involving teens and young adults will increase and is spreading to pre-teens as well.
“Upwards of 3 million high school students, 1 in 5, use e-cigarettes,” Kaslow said of recent reports. “One in 20 middle school students are vaping. I believe that is underestimated. And we will continue to see patients coming in with respiratory injury.
“We need more information, data, case reports and research to gain more insight into the dangers and complications,” he said. “Unfortunately, more data also means more children are getting sick.”
Kaslow said the flavoring of the liquid, the main attraction for younger vapers, is often a combination of chemicals being inhaled, causing health issues.
“Users are inhaling chemicals that are not meant to be inhaled. With cigarettes it took 40-50 years to see the negative impact. It appears that some of the effects we are seeing with use of e-cigarettes can occur within hours after inhalation while others are developing over months.”