Vaping, smoking and even using nicotine gum and patches could increase the risk of deadly heat exhaustion, new research suggests.
The warning was issued as Britain braces for a “mini heatwave” this weekend, with the mercury expected to hit 31C in some areas. It also comes as new figures show one in ten adults are currently vaping.
An international team of researchers established a link between nicotine and heat exhaustion. To do so, they recruited 10 men who neither smoked nor vaped and gave them a nicotine patch to wear overnight.
The men were then asked to cycle non-stop for 60 minutes in rooms heated to 20°C and 30°C.
The volunteers’ temperatures were then taken, both internally, using a temperature-testing “pill” that is swallowed and then wirelessly transmits data to an app, and externally, on the skin.
The warning will be a particular concern for the one in ten adults who now vape, according to the latest figures published this week (file image)
Although it was initially promoted as a way to quit smoking, research shows that many of those who now vape have never smoked. Earlier this year, World Health Organisation (WHO) chiefs ruled that vaping cannot be recommended as a way to quit smoking as so little is known about the harms and benefits.
The forecast has prompted the UK’s Health Security Agency to issue a 54-hour heat health warning for large swathes of Britain.
The next day they were given a patch that did not contain nicotine and repeated the entire exercise.
This experiment was repeated four times and neither the participants nor the researchers knew when they received active or inactive patches.
Two participants had to withdraw from the 30°C nicotine trials because one had “reached the maximum ethical limit for gastrointestinal temperature” and the other dropped out due to “nausea and chills”.
Overall, the team concluded that nicotine use increases “thermal stress” during exertion, leading to heat exhaustion, by reducing blood flow to the skin.
Drawing on studies showing that ex-smokers tend to gain weight when they quit, physiologist Professor Toby Mundel of Brock University in Canada, who led the study, said: “Nicotine appears to speed up a person’s metabolic rate, basically increasing the number of calories they burn.”
Other studies also found that nicotine constricts blood vessels, so less blood flows to the skin.
Blood flow to the skin allows the body to release heat and provides the fluid for sweat. If this is restricted, the body can overheat, he added.
A yellow weather warning has been issued for 54 hours from 5pm on 18 July until 20 July, with the highest temperatures recorded in London, the south-east and east of England, and the East Midlands.
The warm weather comes after a wet start to July that saw the country inundated with 97 percent of the month’s usual average rainfall.
South-east England and London will be hardest hit by the heat, with temperatures likely to reach 31°C.
The weather is forecast to be milder on Sunday, but the Met Office warned of “minor impacts on the health and social care sector” that could “increase the risk of mortality among vulnerable people” before then.
Around one in five Britons is thought to smoke or vape, with rates of the latter habit rising dramatically, particularly among those under 25.
Although it was initially promoted as a way to quit smoking, research shows that many of those who now vape have never smoked.
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Earlier this month, the heads of the World Health Organization (WHO) ruled that vaping cannot be recommended as a way to quit smoking as too little is known about the harms and benefits.
The world body’s decision contradicts NHS advice that the devices are an effective way to quit the habit, which is one of the biggest causes of illness and death in the UK.
In a world-first guide setting out possible interventions to help people stop using tobacco products, the WHO has described the evidence surrounding e-cigarettes as “complex”.
Vaping “may” be recommended as an aid to quit smoking “in the future as evidence accumulates,” he added.
Instead, health officials should support “behavioural” support, such as counselling or smartphone apps and nicotine replacement therapy, to help people quit smoking.
Professor Mundel said his team’s findings linking nicotine to heat exhaustion also raised concerns for the upcoming Olympics, which begin in Paris next week, because, paradoxically, many athletes smoke or vape.
Through urine tests collected during international sporting events between 2012 and 2020, Professor Mundel found that a staggering 55 percent of baseball players, 43 percent of hockey players and 42 percent of football players were nicotine users, based on elevated levels in their samples.
The last Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan, “were the hottest and most humid on record,” but the upcoming Games are predicted to potentially break those records once again.
“Holding the Olympic Games in an urban environment with limited green space and a lot of pavement and concrete – which absorbs heat – increases the risk of heat exhaustion for athletes and the viewing public,” he said.
Earlier this year, independent research revealed that one in five professional footballers, both male and female, use nicotine pouches containing snus, which they place in their mouth.
Professor Mundel said the results of his study are not only relevant to athletes, but also to other people working in high-temperature environments, including the military, firefighters and some industries.