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Vaping and Heart Attacks

Discussion in 'E-News' started by Bantorvaper, Apr 26, 2019.

  1. Bantorvaper
    Mellow

    Bantorvaper Thread Starter Well-Known Member

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    Article from Planet of the Vapes
    Vaping and Heart Attacks | Planet of the Vapes

    Posted 17th April 2019 by Dave Cross
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    The American Journal of Preventative Medicine has published a letter by Konstantinos Farsalinos and Raymond Niaura. “E-cigarette Use and Myocardial Infarction: Association Versus Causal Inference” counters that lies put out in a recent Wichita study.
    Konstantinos Farsalinos said: “I am sure you remember the story that e-cigarettes increase the risk of heart attacks. I characterised such statements as epidemiological and scientific malpractice, and I strive to prove that [in this letter].”

    The authors write: “We read with particular interest the study by Alzahrani et al., who examined the association between e-cigarette use and myocardial infarction (MI). With this letter, we would like to express our concern about the study conclusions.”

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    The first error they noted was with the selection of the data sets for analysis: “Although annual data sets of the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) have been released consistently, the authors chose to pool non-consecutive years (2014 and 2016) and did not mention any particular reason for this. According to the National Centre for Health Statistics (NCHS), a new sampling design was implemented in 2016.2 Therefore, 2014 and 2016 fall into different sampling design periods.”

    The selective procedure allowed the Wichita researchers to conclude: “E-cig users have higher odds of myocardial infarction, stroke, depression, anxiety, emotional problems, circulatory problems and lower risk of hypertension and diabetes compared to non-E-cigarette users.”

    Stanton Glantz embraced the findings and proclaimed: “e-cigarettes are a lot more dangerous than people used to think…e-cigarettes make it harder, not easier, to quit smoking.”

    The study and Glantz’ comments were widely lambasted at the time. Michael Siegel commented: “This is yet another example of the junk science that is rapidly being spewed out by anti-tobacco researchers who are apparently more interested in demonizing vaping than in using rigorous scientific reasoning.”

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    Farsalinos and Niaura point out that it is impossible for the study’s authors to arrive at their stated conclusion: “[It] is a misinterpretation and misrepresentation of the study findings. The ‘increased risk’ claim clearly implies causality and a specific temporal definition of events (i.e., that e-cigarette use precedes MI and e-cigarette use caused the MI). This disagrees with what Alzahrani and colleagues mention in the Limitations section of their article: the study cannot permit identifying causal relationships in part because it is not known when the MIs occurred relative to e-cigarette use. It also violates a basic principle of epidemiology that no causal inference can be derived from any cross-sectional study, such as the NHIS.”

    They concluded with a demonstration of how flawed the conclusion is by performing an identical operation to demonstrate that the use of cholesterol medications can also be associated with heart attacks – clearly a nonsense.

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    Konvict and Siam Diesel like this.

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