Does “Dry Hit” Vaping of Vitamin E Acetate Contribute to EVALI? Simulating Toxic Ketene Formation During E-Cigarette Use

02 March 2020, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Vitamin E acetate (VEA) is strongly linked to the outbreak of electronic-cigarette or vaping product use-associated lung injury (EVALI). It has been proposed that VEA decomposition to ketene – a respiratory poison that damages lungs at low ppm levels – may play a role in EVALI. However, there is no information available on the temperature at which VEA decomposes and how this correlates with the vaping process. We have studied the temperature-dependent kinetics of VEA decomposition using quantum chemical and statistical mechanical techniques, developing a chemical kinetic model of the vaping process. This model predicts that, under typical vaping conditions, the use of VEA contaminated e-cigarette products is unlikely to produce ketene at harmful levels. However, at the high temperatures encountered at low e-cigarette product levels, which produce “dry hits”, ketene concentrations are predicted to reach acutely toxic levels in the lungs (as high as 30 ppm). We therefore hypothesize that dry hit vaping of e-cigarette products containing VEA contributes to EVALI.

Keywords

Vitamin E acetate
EVALI
E-cigarette
Thermal decomposition

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
Actions
Title
VEA-Pyrolysis-ESI
Description
Actions

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