| Literature DB >> 32355323 |
Soha Talih1,2, Rola Salman1,2, Rachel El-Hage3,2, Ebrahim Karam1,2, Sally Salam3, Nareg Karaoghlanian1,2, Ahmad El-Hellani3,2, Najat Saliba3,2, Alan Shihadeh4,5.
Abstract
In 2018, JUUL entered the UK market, where EU regulations limit liquid nicotine concentration to 20 mg/mL, approximately one-third the level of JUUL products sold in the USA. We hypothesized that JUUL's UK product was engineered to deliver greater electrical power and boost liquid vaporization such that the net nicotine delivery rate was similar to the US version. We compared electrical characteristics, liquid composition, and aerosol emissions of JUUL devices procured in the USA and the UK. Study outcomes included electrical power, total and freebase nicotine, propylene glycol/vegetable glycerin ratio, carbonyls, and reactive oxygen species. Liquids and aerosols were analyzed by GCMS, HPLC, and fluorescence. Compared to the US version, JUUL UK had approximately one-third the liquid nicotine concentration in the liquid (5.4 vs. 1.6 wt.%) and aerosol (4.7 and 1.3 wt.%). Other than nicotine concentration and yield, we found no differences in any other study outcome, including electrical power. Currently, JUUL UK emits nicotine at a far lower rate than the US product, offering an opportunity to study how this factor impacts user behavior, JUUL uptake, and other population-level outcomes across the two markets.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32355323 PMCID: PMC7192936 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-64414-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Comparison of toxicant emissions, liquid composition and electrical characteristics between JUUL devices sold in the USA and UK. Mean (SD), *p < 0.05, N = 3.
| JUUL USA | JUUL UK | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Max puff duration (sec) | 5.86(0.03) | 5.92(0.03) | |
| Average voltage (V)a | 1.06(0.03)–2.73(0.03) | 1.13(0.05)–2.72(0.05) | |
| Pod resistance (Ω)b | 1.83(0.06) | 1.7(0.1) | |
| Computed average power (W) | 0.62–4.08 | 0.75–4.36 | |
| Nicotine concentration (mg/mL) | 65(3) | 19(1)* | |
| % Freebase | 4.2(2.5) | 5.6(2.4) | |
| pH | 6(0.5) | 6.5(0.4) | |
| PG/VG (v/v) | 27/73 | 24/76 | |
| Total particulate matter (mg) | 27.4(0.46) | 33.5(6.51) | |
| Nicotine (mg) | 1.3(0.1) | 0.4(0.1)* | |
| Reactive oxygen species (nmol) | 1.01(0.36) | 0.13(0.005) | |
| Formaldehyde | 4.07(0.24) | 3.66(0.14) | |
| Acetaldehyde | 3.88(0.37) | 3.84(0.47) | |
| Acetone | 13.27(0.1) | 13.46(0.29) | |
| Acrolein | ND | 0.01(0.001) | |
| Propionaldehyde | 0.03(0.005) | 0.01(0.03) | |
| Crotonaldehyde | 0.4(0.02) | 0.4(0.02) | |
| Methacrolein | 1.54(0.02) | 1.54(0.01) | |
| Butyraldehyde | ND | ND | |
| Valeraldehyde | ND | ND | |
| Glyoxal | 0.35(0.004) | 0.36(0.007) | |
| Methylglyoxal | 2.08(0.21) | 1.16(0.33)* | |
| Total carbonyls | 25.71(0.55) | 24.48(0.3)* | |
aVoltage delivered to the coil was found to vary during a 6 sec puff, with a maximum average of 2.73(0.04)V for both devices during the first 0.6 sec. The voltage stabilizes after that to an average of 1.09(0.05)V. bResistance refers to that of the coil at room temperature; the resistance of the coil is expected to change as its temperature increases during puffing.