New research suggests that switching from smoking to vaping won't prevent some dangerous changes to a person's genome.
In exercise bike tests, twentysomethings who'd been vaping for at least two years had much lower exercise capacity than those ...
Related Cigarette smoking hits 80-year low in U.S. Smoking, vaping linked to similar unhealthy changes in DNA Health survey reveals substance use, mental health of teens, adults The study tracked ...
Magazine. Getty A new study has found a link between vaping and the mental health of teenagers. According to research done by Australia's Matilda Centre for Research in Mental Health and Substance ...
He said: "Previous research has shown that vaping is linked to lung inflammation and damage, and harmful changes to the blood vessels. Although, some research suggests that vaping could be used to ...
In semen samples from those with high-risk strains, scientists noticed a lower count of white blood cells and an elevation of reactive oxygen species, which can damage sperm and alter DNA. Samples ...
Vaping is linked to mental fog ... And e-cigarette users experience similar DNA changes to specific cheek cells as smokers, according to a study led by University College London and the University ...
The changes to cell DNA that could revolutionize disease prevention. ScienceDaily . Retrieved September 18, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2024 / 08 / 240821221840.htm ...
Previous research investigating links between vaping and cigarette, cannabis, and other substance use has mostly been limited to 1-2 year follow-up periods and younger adolescents. In the current ...
The New York Times updated a headline in a Saturday opinion piece that sparked controversy after it appeared to link Sen. JD Vance (R-OH) to Nazism and White Supremacy. A story published Saturday ...
They answered questions related to mental health, drug use, vaping and overall well-being. The study, which was published in the Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry on Monday ...
A study conducted by Australia's Matilda Centre for Research in Mental Health and Substance Use surveyed 5,000 students between the ages of 12 and 14 Getty Stock photo of a woman smoking an electronic ...