Teens vaping pot face more health risk than cigarette smokers

"In short, it is all bad but if you also vape cannabis you have a greater number of unhealthy respiratory symptoms than if you just smoke cigarettes or marijuana, or vape e-cigarettes," says Carol Boyd. "Without a doubt, cigarettes and e-cigarettes are unhealthy and not good for lungs. However, vaping marijuana appears even worse." (Credit: Rubén Bagüés/Unsplash)

Teenagers who vape cannabis have a greater risk for respiratory symptoms indicating lung injury than teens who smoke cigarettes or pot, or vape nicotine, a new study shows.

The findings challenge conventional wisdom about vaping nicotine, says Carol Boyd, professor emerita at the University of Michigan School of Nursing.

“I thought that e-cigarettes (vaping nicotine) would be the nicotine product most strongly associated with worrisome respiratory symptoms,” she says. “Our data challenges the assumption that smoking cigarettes or vaping nicotine is the most harmful to the lungs.

“If we control for vaping cannabis in our analyses, we find there is a weaker relationship between e-cigarette or cigarette use and respiratory symptoms when compared to vaping cannabis.”

Boyd, who also co-directs the University of Michigan’s Center for Drugs, Alcohol, Smoking and Health, stresses that the findings don’t mean that vaping nicotine or smoking cigarettes or marijuana are not bad for you. These products also produce symptoms of lung injury, but not to the same degree as vaping marijuana, she says.

“In short, it is all bad but if you also vape cannabis you have a greater number of unhealthy respiratory symptoms than if you just smoke cigarettes or marijuana, or vape e-cigarettes,” Boyd says. “Without a doubt, cigarettes and e-cigarettes are unhealthy and not good for lungs. However, vaping marijuana appears even worse.”

Boyd and colleague Philip Veliz, research assistant professor of nursing, wanted to explore the association of unhealthy respiratory symptoms among US adolescents currently using cigarettes, e-cigarettes, or cannabis and who had vaped cannabis within their lifetime.

Those who reported vaping marijuana were roughly twice as likely to report “wheezing and whistling” in the chest than those who did not. Current use of cigarettes, e-cigarettes, and cannabis were associated with some respiratory symptoms, such as dry cough, but most associations were not significant after controlling for vaping cannabis.

The researchers also found that an asthma diagnosis most strongly associated with symptoms of future lung injury than cigarettes, e-cigarettes, cannabis use, and vaping cannabis.

One study limitation is that the researchers did not look at co-use of vaping cannabis and the use of cigarettes or e-cigarettes.

“Future studies need to assess if it is the combination of vaping both nicotine and cannabis that is creating so many respiratory issues,” Veliz says. “It may be the combination of vaping cannabis along with smoking cigarettes is what leads to the high rates of respiratory symptoms among youthful marijuana vapers.”

Boyd and Veliz looked at self-reported symptoms from a sample of adolescents ages 12-17 years, from the 2016-2018 Wave of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study. Symptoms included wheezing and whistling in the chest, sleep disturbed or speech limited due to wheezing, sounding wheezy during or after exercise, and dry cough at night not associated with chest illness or infection.

The study appears in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

Source: University of Michigan