Ambrosia
Good of the Fods
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2009
- Messages
- 2,675
The average cigarette yields about 1mg of nicotine, which is well below being lethal. However that does not mean that it is 'harmless'. Nicotine increases blood pressure and clotting, may contribute to atherosclerosis, and has numerous other side effects. Nicotine is as addictive as Cocaine, but 10 times more toxic.
[citation needed]
E-cigs are potentially more dangerous that conventional cigarettes, because the nicotine is held in liquid form. It is rapidly absorbed through the skin and a dose of 30–60 mg could be lethal.
rubbish.
Dangerous rubbish at that. E-liquid contains ~2.5% nicotine at the higher commonly available strengths. In order to rub 60mg of the stuff on your skin from e-liquid at 2.5% strength you'd need to coat yourself in 24ml, the average refill tank takes about 3ml. so if that figure was right you'd need to empty almost an entire 30ml bottle on yourself and wait a while without washing it off.
However the commonly used LD50 that's widely used for nicotine is off by about a factor of 10. It's based on centuries old science. A newer estimate for LD50 for nicotine would put it at more like 500-1000mg. [link another link]
It's nowhere near as toxic as commonly claimed. Routinely gets conflated with smoking (smoking is dangerous, nicotine much less so) It's also in our food. Nicotine is produced by the nightshade family of plants, whose members include tomatoes and potatoes.
Everyone who eats a western diet will test positive for nicotine. Food that has nicotine in it contains tiny amounts, so is harmless. Toxicity is a function of dose.
E-liquid *is* very toxic to young children and pets, but e-cigarettes have been around around a decade now and there are probably over 10million e-cig users worldwide. There has been 1 reported fatality from e-liquid. If it was as toxic as the 60mg dose that's often claimed there would very likely have been many more fatalities by now.