organic weed
Well-Known Member
Hello Folks
I'm a healthy 40+ years old. I exercise cardiovascularly 5 times a week. I have been an athlete in the past so I know what it means to do cardiovascular work.
I started using cannabis again about 3 years ago after 10 years rest. I'm not a daily consumer, vaporizing 3 times maximum per week with 0.3/0.35 gr. Overall I am a light consumer, about 1 gram/week, vaping always below 200 C which is below tars and CO and benzene start forming.
I grow my organic staff. No liquid fertilizer. I use it against stress, as I have the tendency to accumulate it?
I had problems with dry throat in the beginning of vaping because I have chronic rinities for ages due to an allergy, which makes my mucosa sensible. I overcome it by attaching my vape to a water pipe and drinking some water after every 2/3 hits, which I do and things improved a lot.
Recently I also added very hot water to my vape because I read it was better than iced cold water on the throat. Things got even better on the throat.
However after a couple of times I did that, I felt a burning sensation in my lung if I take big hits. Small hits are ok, but not big hits anymore. It started about 2 weeks ago, a few days after I used hot water.
I did an Internet search on possible causes and I did not find much, except this interesting article saying that "burnt lung feeling" is given when people have been chronic smokers for years or have had a serious pulmonary illness in the past.
http://www.stonerdays.com/stoner-guide-vapes-bad-lungs/
Well, I've never had any of these two things and I have no problem at all with breathing during my intense aerobic exercise. Since I started vaping I have some small mucus production but no cough or staff like that. I did pulmonary exams 1 year ago and everything was ok.
All of this is to ask your opinion on following two aspects:
1. Can the heated water caused/causes some minor irritation on my lungs so that now I feel that burning lung sensation in big hits? I still use warm water.
2. Isn't the cannabis oil that gets to my lungs at 170-200 C, causing this burning sensation?
This second case is what worries me more because when vaporizing, we are actually breathing heated oil. These are tiny small particle that can fly only because the mechanics of vapor works in that way. If the oil wouldn't be much hotter than the surrounding, it wouldn't fly. So when it reaches the lungs, hot heated oil can irritate or even burn them if the vape is too hot... That would be bad news for vaping... After vaping repeatedly for a long time - which I never did as I am a light MJ user, but I have very sensitive mucosa because of my allergy, remember? - .... So who vapes for a long time can have damaged lungs because of the heated oil deposited on the lung?
What do you think could be the cause of my lung burning sensation when taking long hits?
Did you experienced similar issue before?
In addition, vaping can be pretty harsh on throat and after a long time, vaping can also be a cause for some serious illness to develop.
What do you thing about this also? Vaping bad on lungs and throat because of mechanical problems due to too much heat in the vapor but not for the vapor compounds that are perfectly safe...
EDIT: just to clarify even more my point... When burning during combustion, the smoke is full of contaminants in a molecular form in the smoke that is basically hot air at 500+ C. However, hot air can get warm almost instantekt when mixed with cold air. Which is what happens when smoking, where there are tons of hazardous chemicals in the smoke that get warmer. Lung problems by smokers are caused by the toxins and not by the heat
The dynamics of vaping is still pretty much unknown. The resin is an oil. When it reaches its boiling point it evaporates by the million of particles still are in the form of oil, correct? The oil is much more difficult to cool than the smoke, correct? So it would reach the lung at a higher T. Right or wrong? Can vaping also damage the lungs somehow after a long use?
I'm a healthy 40+ years old. I exercise cardiovascularly 5 times a week. I have been an athlete in the past so I know what it means to do cardiovascular work.
I started using cannabis again about 3 years ago after 10 years rest. I'm not a daily consumer, vaporizing 3 times maximum per week with 0.3/0.35 gr. Overall I am a light consumer, about 1 gram/week, vaping always below 200 C which is below tars and CO and benzene start forming.
I grow my organic staff. No liquid fertilizer. I use it against stress, as I have the tendency to accumulate it?
I had problems with dry throat in the beginning of vaping because I have chronic rinities for ages due to an allergy, which makes my mucosa sensible. I overcome it by attaching my vape to a water pipe and drinking some water after every 2/3 hits, which I do and things improved a lot.
Recently I also added very hot water to my vape because I read it was better than iced cold water on the throat. Things got even better on the throat.
However after a couple of times I did that, I felt a burning sensation in my lung if I take big hits. Small hits are ok, but not big hits anymore. It started about 2 weeks ago, a few days after I used hot water.
I did an Internet search on possible causes and I did not find much, except this interesting article saying that "burnt lung feeling" is given when people have been chronic smokers for years or have had a serious pulmonary illness in the past.
http://www.stonerdays.com/stoner-guide-vapes-bad-lungs/
Well, I've never had any of these two things and I have no problem at all with breathing during my intense aerobic exercise. Since I started vaping I have some small mucus production but no cough or staff like that. I did pulmonary exams 1 year ago and everything was ok.
All of this is to ask your opinion on following two aspects:
1. Can the heated water caused/causes some minor irritation on my lungs so that now I feel that burning lung sensation in big hits? I still use warm water.
2. Isn't the cannabis oil that gets to my lungs at 170-200 C, causing this burning sensation?
This second case is what worries me more because when vaporizing, we are actually breathing heated oil. These are tiny small particle that can fly only because the mechanics of vapor works in that way. If the oil wouldn't be much hotter than the surrounding, it wouldn't fly. So when it reaches the lungs, hot heated oil can irritate or even burn them if the vape is too hot... That would be bad news for vaping... After vaping repeatedly for a long time - which I never did as I am a light MJ user, but I have very sensitive mucosa because of my allergy, remember? - .... So who vapes for a long time can have damaged lungs because of the heated oil deposited on the lung?
What do you think could be the cause of my lung burning sensation when taking long hits?
Did you experienced similar issue before?
In addition, vaping can be pretty harsh on throat and after a long time, vaping can also be a cause for some serious illness to develop.
What do you thing about this also? Vaping bad on lungs and throat because of mechanical problems due to too much heat in the vapor but not for the vapor compounds that are perfectly safe...
EDIT: just to clarify even more my point... When burning during combustion, the smoke is full of contaminants in a molecular form in the smoke that is basically hot air at 500+ C. However, hot air can get warm almost instantekt when mixed with cold air. Which is what happens when smoking, where there are tons of hazardous chemicals in the smoke that get warmer. Lung problems by smokers are caused by the toxins and not by the heat
The dynamics of vaping is still pretty much unknown. The resin is an oil. When it reaches its boiling point it evaporates by the million of particles still are in the form of oil, correct? The oil is much more difficult to cool than the smoke, correct? So it would reach the lung at a higher T. Right or wrong? Can vaping also damage the lungs somehow after a long use?
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