Tag: UC Davis

  • Elfbar and Lost Mary Touting 281-Point Safety Testing Protocols

    Elfbar and Lost Mary Touting 281-Point Safety Testing Protocols

    The same week a report was released by UC Davis saying several large vape brands released more toxic metals than traditional cigarettes, Elfbar and Lost Mary announced a major expansion of their product safety measures, claiming they now follow an extensive 281-point testing protocol, including 142 tests on e-liquids, 22 on aerosols, 86 on device materials, and 31 reliability assessments.

    The brands reported completing 11,637 in-house tests in May 2025, following more than 120,000 tests conducted throughout 2024, with all products routinely tested to ensure compliance with UK, EU TPD, and AFNOR standards. “This comprehensive safety upgrade underscores both brands’ commitment to innovation and consumer protection in the vape market,” the companies said in a release.

  • Study: (Non-FDA-Approved) Vapes Emit More Toxic Metals Than Cigarettes

    Study: (Non-FDA-Approved) Vapes Emit More Toxic Metals Than Cigarettes

    A study from UC Davis, published in ACS Central Science, raised alarms about the safety of popular disposable e-cigarettes, revealing that some devices emit higher levels of toxic metals—notably lead, nickel, and antimony—than traditional cigarettes. Tests confirmed that toxic metals stemmed from leaded bronze components and degrading heating coils, with early detection of antimony even in unused e-liquids.

    Researchers tested seven disposable devices across three major brands—Elfbar, Flum Pebble, and Esco, which are not FDA-authorized for use in the U.S. but are widely sold by retailers—simulating 500–1,500 puffs per device. The report said one device released more lead in a single day’s use than nearly 20 packs of cigarettes. Four of the devices emitted nickel and lead at levels surpassing safety thresholds for neurological and respiratory damage. Two exceeded cancer risk limits due to antimony content.

  • Study: Smoking, Vaping, Marijuana All Affect Airways Differently

    Study: Smoking, Vaping, Marijuana All Affect Airways Differently

    According to new research by UC Davis, cigarette smoke has a greater impact on airway health than marijuana smoke or vaping. Medical Xpress said researchers found that tobacco smoke, in particular, increased inflammation and oxidative stress. Their paper was published in Respiratory Research.

    “We didn’t measure the chemicals that come out of cigarettes or marijuana, we measured the responses of the airway epithelial cells, as well as some systemic responses,” said pulmonologist Nicholas Kenyon, director of the UC Davis Asthma Network and co-senior author on the study. “The metabolites tell us quite a bit about oxidative stress and inflammation.”

    The study recruited 254 participants, with 132 using a tobacco or marijuana product, sometimes both. The researchers collected exhaled breath condensate, which is the fog people see when they breathe on a mirror.

    “From there, the team used mass spectrometry to analyze the oxylipin content in the collected condensate,” wrote Medical Xpress. “Oxylipins are lipid-based signaling molecules often associated with inflammation and oxidative stress. The researchers found these metabolites were significantly upregulated in tobacco smokers, meaning they increased in activity. The oxylipin responses were less dramatic in participants who vaped tobacco products. For marijuana smokers, the oxylipin profiles were much closer (but not identical) to non-users.”

    These findings diverge from earlier cell culture studies, which showed that both tobacco and marijuana smoke generate significant oxidative stress and inflammation. The current study is the first of its kind with humans.

    “Cigarettes upregulate these inflammatory fatty acids, but we didn’t see that nearly as much with marijuana and marijuana products,” said Kenyon. “When we look at the signatures from the marijuana smokers, they look closer to non-users and non-smokers than the tobacco smokers, and that was a surprise to us.”