A parents’ guide: What to know, do if your kid is vaping

Even parents who know their kids are vaping can find it near impossible to figure out what their children are inhaling into their lungs. That can be true even if they find the device.

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Nicotine, whether smoked or vaped, restricts blood flow to the gums, which can contribute to periodontal disease. The fluid in e-cigarettes, which can include propylene glycol, benzene, formaldehyde and other chemicals, only increases the risks.

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With more than a dozen recent deaths from vaping-related lung injury and confirmed cases nationwide topping 1,000, parents are right to be worried.

As use of electronic cigarettes by middle and high school students has skyrocketed, so has the number of parents unaware they have nicotine-addicted children.

Complicating matters, even parents who know their kids are vaping can find it near impossible to figure out what their children are inhaling into their lungs. That can be true even if they find the device.

Whether it’s nicotine, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) oil, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, or both, teens need to quit. That’s far easier said than done.

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Pediatric pulmonologist Dr. Sunil Kapoor saw firsthand the pull of vaping both substances when an an asthmatic teen patient was back in his office this month, a year after he spent a week in the hospital for his vaping. The boy’s school told his father the 16-year-old was vaping nicotine in the bathroom, but he was vaping THC as well.

“You’re driving me a little bit crazy,” Kapoor, chief of pediatric pulmonology at Inova Children’s Hospital in Falls Church, Virginia, recalls telling him. “You were in the intensive care unit. Why?”

Overall, the number of vaping-related illnesses has surpassed 1,000, and there’s no sign the outbreak is fading, U.S. health officials said last week.

Doctors say the illnesses, which first appeared in March, resemble an inhalation injury. Symptoms include severe, shortness of breath, fatigue, and chest pain. Most who got sick said they vaped products containing THC, the marijuana ingredient that causes a high, but some said they vaped only nicotine.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said 1,080 confirmed and probable cases have been reported in 48 states and one U.S. territory as of Tuesday afternoon. The count includes 18 deaths in 15 states.

More than a third of patients are under age 21, but the deaths have been older adults who apparently had more difficulty recovering.

The Food and Drug Administration is analyzing products from 18 states, but neither that agency nor the CDC has pinpointed an electronic cigarette, vaping device, liquid or ingredient as the root cause.

The investigation has increasingly focused on THC vaping products. But until a cause is found, the CDC continues to advise Americans to refrain from using any vaping products.

Complicating the investigation are apparently conflicting medical reports about what’s been seen in the lungs of different patients. Some doctors suggested patients’ lungs are being clogged and inflamed by oils from vaping liquids, but a report published this week by the New England Journal of Medicine pointed to the kind of chemical burns that might come from poisonous gases.

“There may be a lot of different nasty things in e-cigarette or vaping products, and they may cause different harms in the lung,” Schuchat said. “We hope over the months ahead that we’ll learn more about the spectrum of lung conditions that these exposures are having.”

Only Alaska and New Hampshire have not reported any illnesses.

Here are tips for parents worried about their kids and vaping:

What is vaping?

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Electronic cigarettes and Juuls, the most popular brand name for young people,have a battery, a heating element and a place to hold a liquid, known as e-liquid or vape juice, which is typically flavored. The heat creates a vapor, or aerosol, that users inhale. These devices can also be used with THC or cannabidiol (CBD), which can legally contain .03% of THC to be sold in stores or higher levels if sold in dispensaries. While e-cigarette cartridges can be purchased with a wide variety of nicotine levels down to 0%, Juuls have a high level of nicotine – as much as a pack of 20 regular cigarettes.

How do I know if my child is vaping? Are there symptoms?

Short of finding the device or catching kids in the act, you may not. But some key signs include frequently stepping away from family, leaving to go outside or to the bathroom in school and anywhere else they could sneak a vape, says Carol Riccio, the nurse leader for the Newburyport, Massachusetts, school district.

Irritability is another key indicator, although teasing out when it’s attributable to vaping versus simply being teens can be difficult, Kapoor says. Excessive coughing, shortness of breath and increasing intolerance to exercise should raise suspicion as well, he says.

Some children show up in school nurses’ offices suffering from “nicotine toxicity” because of near-constant puffing on the devices, says Laurie Combe, president of the National Association of School Nurses. Signs that kids may have ingested too much nicotine include nausea, vomiting and fluctuating blood pressure, she says.

I found a vape device. How do I know what’s in it?

It can be very difficult to tell the difference between nicotine e-liquid and THC or a CBD-based oil. A legally purchased cartridge with THC or CBD oil or nicotine would have some sort of packaging or labeling saying what it is. But even Juul-brand cartridges, which are supposed to be “closed loop” so nothing can be added, are often tampered with and filled with THC-based oils.

Narrow cylinder-shaped vials are more likely to contain THC oil; nicotine ones tend to be wider and bigger, as American Vapor Association President Gregory Conley demonstrated Friday with his Njoy device. THC is thick and oil based so may not appear to move in the cartridge while nicotine e-liquid would flow freely in the cartridge.

Even Juul-brand cartridges, which are supposed to be “closed loop” so nothing can be added, are often tampered with and filled with THC-based oils.

Even Juul-brand cartridges, which are supposed to be “closed loop” so nothing can be added, are often tampered with and filled with THC-based oils.

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Parents can purchase home drug test kits online to determine what’s in a cartridge or vial, but they won’t know the concentration of the THC or added contaminants. It could be CBD oil with a very low percentage of THC.

They could also drug test their child to see if they have THC in their systems, but that won’t determine whether the THC was ingested through smoking, eating or vaping. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said earlier this month that nearly 4 in 5 people who suffered vaping-related lung injury in the recent outbreak reported using products that contained THC, alone or combined with nicotine.

So now I have a teen addicted to nicotine. What do I do?

Nicotine replacement therapy or prescription drugs and counseling plus other support is what’s needed, Riccio says. Perhaps most important, she recommends parents ”remain calm and supportive” and avoid punishing what has often become addictive behavior. Be prepared for kids to try to quit vaping and fail an average of six times, she says.

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Newburyport’s high schools have a four-week “vaping diversion program,” which includes after-school meetings with adjustment counselors, wellness teachers, school nurses, biology teachers and the school principal. Data on the program’s results is expected by the end of the year.

Nicotine is a stimulant, so it’s also important to determine whether your child is vaping because they had a “functional” need to be stimulated to focus in school or if they were doing it to “counteract feeling low or depressed,” says Theresa Nguyen, a social worker who is vice president of policy and programs at the nonprofit Mental Health America. Either might suggest additional therapy or medical treatment is needed.

My kid is vaping THC oil. Does he or she need addiction treatment?

The process of vaping triples the strength of the THC being ingested. THC use in those whose brains are still developing can lead to cognition loss and psychiatric problems, Surgeon General Jerome Adams said in a new health advisory. The larger immediate concern is those under 21 are buying products illegally, which dramatically increases the risk of contaminants and additives federal and state investigators are focusing on as possible causes of the lung injuries.

Dr. Joseph Lee, a child psychiatrist and addiction medicine physician who is medical director at Hazelden Betty Ford Youth Continuum, says most young people with addiction can do outpatient treatment, and many need mental health counseling. About 90 percent of patients with addiction disorders at Hazelden also have mental health problems, he says. He also says the group a child chooses to socialize with and his or her risk-taking behavior are more of a predictor of substance use than whether they start with nicotine.

Read more at usatoday.com

Contributing: Associated Press

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