2014年5月30日星期五

2014 Hottest & newest Disposable cigar With Wholesale Price with Zero harmful toxins by Hekvapor

 
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Disposable cigar are designed to provide the finest and ultimate smoking experience without any of the harmful toxins. It has the potential to help decrease the number of cigarettes you have in a day and quit smoking. cigar is the ultimate in luxury smoking, and is available in a variety of colours and flavours.  cigar state of the art technology im itates the sensation of smoking a shish pipe, with the ease of smoking a cigarette. It is of portable capabilities making it one of a kind and gives 100% satisfaction with the enjoyment of smoking the finest quality shisha flavour. cigar are breaking through barriers and introducing you to a whole new world of smoking in a healthier and more entertaining way.
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Battery Capacity1300mAh
E-cig size150(L)*17(D)mm
Mouthful of full battery1800puffs
Weight of single e-cig38.5g
FilterSoft
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Color of LED lightRed, yellow, green, white, colorful.

New Study of Trajectory of E-Cigarette Use Suggests a Pattern of Decreasing Cigarette and Nicotine Addiction



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In one of the first studies to examine the trajectory of E-cig use over time, Lechner and colleagues have shown that extended duration of E-cig use is associated with reductions in cigarette use and in the strength of nicotine used during vaping.

The methods of the study were as follows: "Individuals were recruited at E-cigs retail locations in a large metropolitan city in the mid-western portion of the United States in July 2013. A total of 159 participants completed a brief 29-item self-report measure that assessed behaviors and perceptions of use."

The results were reported as follows: "Increased duration of e-cigarette use was associated with fewer cigarettes smoked per day and differing patterns of dependence to e-cigarettes contingent upon smoking history. Additionally, increased duration of e-cigarette use was associated with increased frequency of use; however, this finding became non-significant when current tobacco cigarette use was accounted for, suggesting that individuals may increase E-cig use frequency as they decrease cigarette use. Overall, E-cig users tended to decrease the strength of nicotine in their E-cig products regardless of duration of use."

The Rest of the Story

There are three major findings -- all preliminary -- from this study.

First, in contrast to what Stan Glantz is arguing, dual use does not appear to be an "adverse consequence" of e-cigarette experimentation. Instead, it appears to be a positive effect that results in a substantial reduction in cigarette consumption among smokers who would almost certainly not have quit smoking altogether in the absence of electronic cigarettes.

Second, in dual users, the total amount of nicotine intake declines. The increase in electronic cigarette use over time is accompanied by a concomitant decline in cigarette smoking. Thus, overall nicotine declines.

Third, e-cigarette users tend to decrease the strength of nicotine in their products, leading one to believe that overall levels of addiction to nicotine decline compared to their baseline smoking status.

Combined with previous evidence, these results suggest that the natural history of electronic cigarette use over time is characterized, in general, by:

a. Substantial reductions in cigarette use;
b. Reduction in daily nicotine intake; and
c. Movement to a lower level of overall nicotine addiction.

The bottom line: it appears that the use of electronic cigarettes has tremendous health benefits not only for those who quit smoking, but also for those who become dual users. While it may take longer for these individuals to eventually get off of nicotine altogether, it appears that the switch to e-cigarettes yields a much lower level of nicotine addiction, making it easier, not harder, to subsequently cease using nicotine if they so desire.

One of the main criticisms of electronic cigarettes leveled by its opponents in the tobacco control movement is that there are many dual users of e-cigarettes and tobacco cigarettes and that this has adverse public health consequences.

For example, Stan Glantz argued against electronic cigarettes in a Scientific American article, claiming that: "We’ve found very high levels of dual use [traditional cigarettes along with e-cigarette use]. Very few people have switched away from cigarettes or managed to use them as a bridge to eventually go off cigarettes."

While Dr. Glantz's statement that few people have switched away from cigarettes or used E-cig as a bridge to eventually go off cigarettes was not science-based, but pure speculation, there are now two studies which actually examine the trajectory of electronic cigarette and conventional cigarette use among a cohort of e-cigarette users. We are able to empirically examine Glantz's dual use argument and his claim that very few smokers are using e-cigarettes as a bridge to eventually go off cigarettes.

The results from these two studies demonstrate that in contrast to the claims of many anti-smoking advocates, dual use of electronic cigarettes and conventional cigarettes does not necessarily have adverse public health consequences. Instead, it appears that for many smokers, dual use serves as a gateway to decreased nicotine addiction, and perhaps ultimately to smoking cessation.

The results of this study suggest that anti-smoking advocates such as Dr. Glantz are wrong in asserting that very few smokers "have switched away from cigarettes or managed to use them as a bridge to eventually go off cigarettes." Instead, there appears to be a large number of smokers who have indeed switched completely from smoking to vaping, and there also appears to be a large number of smokers who have successfully used electronic cigarettes as a bridge to complete smoking cessation.

The rest of the story is that dual use is not necessarily a bad thing. In fact, it may for some be a gateway to smoking cessation.

reprinted from tobaccoanalysis.

Your worries about E-cigarettes or E-juice will be gone with the wind


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Do E-cigs cause cancer?
Nicotine on its own doesn’t cause cancer, but the chemical is highly addictive and e-cigarettes feed that addiction. Bricker worries that instead of helping smokers quit, the devices will actually encourage them to smoke more.
“People may become dual users,” he said. “They’ll smoke cigarettes and then smoke e-cigarettes when smoking is publicly prohibited. They may be smoking more or smoking the same. We don’t know." However those devices give regular smoking the least hurt to body.
What about secondhand effects on kids?
A big unknown is what the effects are of inhaling propylene glycol vapor, which Bricker said does leave a residue on drapes and carpet and furniture.
“We don’t know the long-term effects of that getting in the blood system and how it might affect diseases and cancers,” he said. “We don’t know how it
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impacts children. Are e-cigarettes dangerous? We don’t know. They haven’t been around long enough and we haven’t studied the chemical compositions to see what impact they have on the body.”

Do they malfunction?

News reports have shown that the devices do occasionally malfunction, starting fires in homes and cars and causing serious injury to users or those around them. A North Carolina man trying to kick his smoking habit by using e-cigs was burned and temporarily blinded earlier this year after a device erupted in his face.
Safety issues of this sort are rare to meet with the right instruction, however.

What’s Big Tobacco’s role?

“I feel like I’m in a time machine,” said Bricker. “All the memes of marketing cigarettes are now being adapted to market e-cigarettes. The message is ‘E-cigs are sexy! They’re fun! They’re sophisticated!’ And that’s a problem. They’re creating an enormous demand for a product that we don’t know enough about.”
The lucrative e-cig business is no longer dominated by small, scrappy start-ups. Big Tobacco has become a major player in the industry.
“The tobacco industry follows the money and if they’re involved, they’re going to profit off people’s addiction,” said Manders, pointing out that 90 percent of long-term smokers start under the age of 18.

Are kids really smoking them?

And e-cigs seem to be just as alluring as the real thing when it comes to kids. A survey-based study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has already determined that e-cigarette use more than doubled among U.S. middle and high school students from 2011-2012, a trend CDC director Dr. Tom Frieden called “deeply troubling.”
Even more troubling, those numbers could be low, according to a recent New York Times story, because many young people think of the devices not as e-cigs, but e-hookahs or vape pens.
Whatever they’re called, e-cigs come in an array of eye-catching colors and candy flavors (think strawberry, watermelon, bubble gum, and grape soda), a marketing gimmick banned in conventional cigarettes because they appeal to young people.
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What if I’m trying to quit smoking?
The bottom line? Both Bricker and Manders suggest sticking with tested methods to kick the smoking habit – and to rely on science, even if it’s slow in coming.
“It’s always a challenge because science moves in first gear and the market works in overdrive,” said Bricker. “But hopefully, people value science enough that they’ll be cautious about whether they want to buy these products. The prudent thing is to wait.”

reprinted from center news.

2014年5月23日星期五

The great e-cig debate from Fred Hutch and SCCA experts aboutE-cig safety




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Are e-cigs safer than cigarettes?
 
According to Bricker, a fair amount of data shows that e-cigarettes don’t contain compounds like formaldehyde, benzene and ammonia which tobacco makers add to regular cigarettes to “spike” the nicotine so it acts faster on the brain and boosts the smoker’s addiction.
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E-cigarettes are also smokeless. They may look like real cigarettes (some even have an LED on the end that glows red or blue), but there’s no tobacco, no flame, no smoke and no resulting tar and carbon monoxide transferred to an e-smoker’s lungs. Instead, a battery converts liquid nicotine and/or flavors into a fog machine-type vapor known as propylene glycol.

“What we know so far is they don’t have many of those very dangerous ingredients that are added to regular cigarettes,” said Bricker. “That’s the harm reduction argument. There’s a lack of tar, a lack of formaldehyde, so that’s better.”

An article published in the January 2011 Journal of Public Health Policy embraces the harm reduction argument, concluding that “Whereas electronic cigarettes cannot be considered safe … they are undoubtedly safer than tobacco cigarettes.”
Do they help you quit?
 

Both Bricker and Manders stress that the jury’s still out when it comes to their efficacy as a smoking cessation tool. Although one study published in Lancet in 2013 found the e-cigs were “modestly effective” at helping smokers quit, comparable to nicotine patches.
The study authors added, though, that more research is “urgently needed to clearly establish their overall benefits and harms at both individual and population levels.”
Who monitors the safety and quality of e-cigs coming into the U.S.?
Experts also have questions about the chemicals used in these unregulated products, many of which are produced in China, a country with a history of producing toxic toothpaste, toys with choking hazards and contaminated pet food. 

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“When things aren’t regulated by the FDA, it means they’re not held up to the same standards of quality,” said Manders. “Harmful products could be placed in the devices and no one will know. The dosage of nicotine could be very high or very low.”

Indeed, Bricker said information presented at the recent Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco conference in Seattle indicated that the level of nicotine in e-cigarettes and vape pens does differ – as does the smoking style of users. Some people take tiny “sips” throughout the day, others puff on them like cigars.

“There are individual differences in the way people use e-cigarettes so the amount of chemicals and nicotine in their bodies will vary,” said Bricker.


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2014年5月22日星期四

E-Cigarettes: A $1.5 Billion Industry Braces for FDA Regulation

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The first time J. Andries Verleur tried an e-cigarette in 2008, he burned his lip and accidentally inhaled the nicotine fluid. “It was one of the worst products I ever tried,” he recalls, “but the idea was amazing.

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Verleur, a heavy smoker, was living in Prague and happened to spot the strange new product in a Vietnamese grocery store. The crude early version obviously didn’t work very well, but Verleur, a serial entrepreneur, immediately realized that if it did work, it could upend the tobacco industry. That was worth looking into: Cigarettes are a global business that generates more than half a trillion dollars every year, according to data from Euromonitor International.
In its simplest form, an e-cigarette is a cartridge filled with a nicotine solution and a battery powering a coil that heats the solution into vapor, which one sucks in and exhales like smoke. Typically, it looks like a regular cigarette, except the tip, embedded with an LED, often glows blue instead of red. The active ingredient in e-cigarettes is the same nicotine found in cigarettes and nicotine patches.
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The effects of inhaling nicotine vapor are not totally understood, but there is no evidence to date that it causes cancer. Experts and logic seem to agree that it’s a lot better than setting chopped-up tobacco leaves on fire and inhaling the nicotine along with thousands of combustion byproducts, some of which are definitely carcinogenic. Because cancer is the main drawback of smoking for a lot of people, the delivery of nicotine without lighting a cigarette is very attractive. And because it produces a wispy vapor instead of acrid smoke, an e-cigarette lets you bring your smoking back indoors, where lighting up in an enclosed space is no longer socially, or legally, acceptable.
Verleur saw right away that if e-cigarettes could be made as convenient and satisfying as a pack of smokes, he’d make a killing. He enlisted the help of his brother, an engineer working for an Agilent Technologies spinoff and at last opened a E-cig company

In a way, electronic cigarettes were made possible by cell phones. The drive to make phones smaller and lengthen their battery life led to the development of batteries and equipment small enough to fit in a container the size and shape of a cigarette. There’s some dispute over who invented the modern e-cigarette, but the first commercially marketed device was created by a Chinese pharmacist, Hon Lik, and introduced to the Chinese market as a smoking cessation device in 2004. From there, e-cigarettes made their way to small shops such as that of the Vietnamese grocer who sold Verleur his first one four years later.

From businessweek.

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