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Spike in US poison calls over e-cigarettes

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AFP Washington
The number of calls to US poison control centers about accidents with bottles of liquid nicotine for refilling e-cigarettes -- many involving children -- has spiked in recent years, health authorities said today.

There was just one such call in September 2010, and 214 in February 2014, said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

More than half of the calls (51 per cent) for e-cigarettes concerned children under age five who had swallowed, inhaled or spilled the liquid on their skin or in their eyes.

The most common complaints were vomiting, nausea and eye irritation.

"This report raises another red flag about e-cigarettes -- the liquid nicotine used in e-cigarettes can be hazardous," said CDC director Tom Frieden.
 

"Use of these products is skyrocketing and these poisonings will continue."

Over the four years studied, there were 2,405 calls related to e-cigarette exposure alone, compared to 16,248 for tobacco cigarettes, mostly due to young children who had eaten them.

About 40 per cent of the calls were due to accidents involving people over age 20, the CDC said.

One death was reported, involving a person who committed suicide by injecting the liquid.

Frieden said the nicotine liquids that are heated and inhaled through the battery-powered device can be particularly dangerous because they are not required to be packaged in child-proof containers.

"And they come in candy and fruit flavors that are appealing to children," said Frieden.

The liquids in question are typically sold in small bottles to refill the e-cigarettes.

"Accidental ingestion by children can be as dangerous as any medication in their parents' medicine cabinet," said Andrew Ting, assistant professor of pediatrics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

"Liquid nicotine should be stored by adults the same way they store drain cleaner or Grandma's blood pressure pills.

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First Published: Apr 04 2014 | 12:30 AM IST

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