The illnesses are widespread, with cases reported from 46 states so far, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Ten states have reported deaths.
Based on 373 cases where data on the patients was available, the CDC says that nearly three-quarters were male, two-thirds were 18 years to 34 years old and 16% were younger than 18 years.
People with the illnesses become weak and short of breath. Many need supplemental oxygen and treatment in intensive care units, and in some the lung damage is so severe that they must be placed on ventilators to keep them alive while their lungs recover. In a few cases, lung function has been so poor that ventilators were not enough, and the patients also had to be connected to machines that pump oxygen directly into the bloodstream.
Most of the patients have recovered enough to go home after days or weeks in the hospital, but doctors say it is too soon to tell whether they will suffer permanent damage to their lungs.
The case count started to snowball in August after health officials made the connection between vaping and the lung problems, and reported it publicly. Doctors around the country then began to realize it might explain some of the odd, pneumonia-like illnesses they were seeing in otherwise healthy people, and many began to question their patients about vaping.
Many people who became sick have said they were vaping THC, the ingredient in marijuana that induces a high, but some patients report vaping only nicotine. Some of the patients who died were older and had underlying illnesses, health officials have said.
No specific ingredients or devices have been identified as the cause of the illnesses, and health experts say multiple devices or ingredients may be involved. Investigations are being conducted by the CDC, Food and Drug Administration and state health departments.
At a hearing Wednesday before a subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, a CDC official said she was “extremely frustrated” at the pace of the investigation. “I wish we had answers already,” said Dr. Anne Schuchat, the principal deputy director of the CDC. “I actually think there may be a very complex set of root causes here that are going to be difficult for us to address as a nation. And we need to take it very seriously.”
Schuchat told the panel members that the agency’s investigation was difficult because the suppliers of the THC products were underground and did not operate legally. The problem is compounded by a growing population of young people who are addicted to vaping, she said.
“We have a very vulnerable population and a very challenging supply chain to address,” she said.
This article originally appeared in
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