Abstract

Total and regional deposition of inhaled electronic cigarette (E-cig) particles in the respiratory tract (RT) depends on both physical properties of the inhaled particles and biological factors of users, for example, breathing pattern or puff profile, airway anatomy, and regional ventilation. Accurate particle sizing of E-cig aerosols is essential for predicting particle deposition in the RT. Studies using a variety of sizing methods have shown mass median aerodynamic diameters ranging from 0.2 to 1.2 um and secondary count diameters in the ultrafine range (<0.1 μm). Incorporating these particle sizes into a multiple-path particle dosimetry (MPPD) model shows 10% to 45% total lung deposition by mass and 30% to 80% for ultrafine particles depending on the breathing patterns. These predictions are consistent with experimental measures of deposition fraction of submicron and ultrafine particles. While box-mod-type E-cig devices allow for full "direct-lung" inhalations of aerosol, the more recent pod-based, and disposable E-cigs (e.g., JUUL, Puff Bar, Stig) deliver the aerosol as a "mouth-to-lung" puff, or bolus, that is inhaled early in the breath followed to various degrees by further inhalation of ambient air. Measurement of realistic ventilation patterns associated with these various devices may further improve deposition predictions. Finally, while in vivo measures of RT deposition present a challenge, a recent methodology to radiolabel E-cig particles may allow for such measurements by gamma scintigraphy. Supported by NIH/NHLBI R01HL139369. © 2022 American Physiological Society. Compr Physiol 12: 1-10, year.

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