The rise in e-cigarette popularity has previously been praised for helping nicotine addicts to quit their smoking habit – yet the debate about their long-term effects rages on.
So-called vaping triggers cancer-related bladder tissue damage, a new study reveals, causing researchers to warn e-cigarette users that they may be putting themselves at risk of the condition.
Some 92 percent of e-cigarette users’ urine tested positive for two of the five compounds linked to bladder cancer, the research found.