Wandris
New Member
The title sounds impressive but it more or less is what I am trying to find out. I have been vaping for about 2-3 years now, several times a day. Over the past year or so I started vaping indoors instead of blowing it out of the window. More recently I have begun to question if vaping is as low risk as everyone wishes to believe it is. Several times over the past year I have had to stop vaping for weeks due to the effects it seemed to be having on me. Chest discomfort/pain, possible bronchitis and other milder effects. It could of course be due to something completely unrelated however vaping is probably the only obvious thing that it could be. Does anyone have an idea how long such particles could stay suspended in contained environment? I have begun to imagine spending the last year breathing in particles with every breath, and even with vape being supposedly free of 95% free of carcinogenic particulates, that would still be a % of the bad stuff going into your lungs with every breath getting right down into the aveoli of the lung. The overall health of those living in the house may also be showing signs of deterioration thus I am considering the possibility of an environmental factor like weed vapors. There is a fair amount of research that has been done on ultrafine particles in urban pollution but few if any to do with marijuana vaporization. Does anyone have any solid information on how long secondary vapors can stay in the air?