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Vaping Raises Blood Clotting Risks, Harms Small Arteries
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Vaping Raises Blood Clotting Risks, Harms Small Arteries

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Can you get a blood clot from vaping? According to new research, you can. Nicotine-laden e-cigarettes raise a user’s risk of blood clots, damage small blood vessels and can also raise heart rate and blood pressure, a new study finds.

The effects are similar to those caused by traditional cigarettes, and raise the concern that long-term vaping could help cause heart attacks or strokes, the Swedish research team warns.

READ: FDA Tells Three Small E-Cigarette Makers to Stop Selling Flavored Products

“Our results suggest that using e-cigarettes that contain nicotine have similar impacts on the body as smoking traditional cigarettes,” study author Gustaf Lyytinen, a clinician at Helsingborg Hospital and researcher at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm says.

One U.S. expert wasn’t surprised by the new findings.

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Nicotine, whether it’s found in traditional or electronic cigarettes “can lead to heart attack and stroke,” Dr. Len Horovitz, a pulmonary specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City says. “Another reason why e-cigarettes should not be thought of as safer than cigarettes.”

In the new study, Lyytinen’s team conducted experiments with 22 women and men aged 18-45 who were occasional smokers but otherwise healthy.

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Participants were tested before and after taking 30 puffs from an e-cigarette containing nicotine, and before and after 30 puffs from an e-cigarette without nicotine. The two tests were conducted on separate occasions, at least one week apart. On each occasion, the researchers measured heart rate and blood pressure and collected a blood sample before the volunteers used the e-cigarettes, then 15 minutes after use and again 60 minutes after use.

Puffing on e-cigarettes containing nicotine led to immediate short-term changes in the volunteers, including an average

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