- Help patients keep their eyes on the ball—and safe from injury
- How to avert an eye care crisis
- Case study: Avoid blurring line between clinical practice and research in optometry
- As technology turns, sports vision optometrist pivots
- Vision-friendly holiday gifts for children
- What you say versus what they hear: Talking contact lenses
- Identify signs of abuse
- excercise may prevent eye diseases
- Tips for an eye-healthy Thanksgiving feast
- protecting patients eye summer
- Lutein zeaxanthin reaffirmed over beta-carotene in AREDS2
- Diabetes Alert Day
- Day of unplugging
- 2021 Telehealth Summit
- Performance evaluation
- wearing contacts safely during COVID-19
- Recharging the retina
- Vitamin A good for the eyes
- Children device use and Myopia
- Physical distancing masks and eye protection
- COVID-19 infection control refresher
- doctor google online symptom checkers
- COVID-19 digital eyestrain
- The many benefits of the Mediterranean Diet
- Spring Break Healthy Contact Lens Hygiene
- CPR Certification Heart Month
- healthy makeup habits
- checking blood pressure
- healthy eyes recipe-eye-friendly nutrients
- best holiday gifts for childrens vision development
- winter weather tips
- Great American Smokeout
- 5 things to ask your older patients about driving
- eating for your eyes
- Vision therapy reading scores
- secondhand smoke could harm childrens eyes
- AOA resources can help patients see with less daylight
- dark chocolate does not improve eyesight
- Pumpkin nutrition benefits
- Teenager loses vision after a steady diet of French fries
- Systolic versus diastolic readings blood pressure
- Increase fitting success with better communication
- Contact Lens Health Week
- Mixing systemic and ocular pediatric medications
- The wonderful healing properties of amniotic membranes
- Optometry and social work
- Smoking and Eye Health
- Novel contact lens design tracks IOP for continuous 24-hour period
- Blue-light hype or much ado about nothing
- Help Patients summer swimming
- Toys and games nice and naughty for vision development
- 21st-century optometric care
- Flu views Should you get a flu shot
- Vision is key to aging gracefully new study says
- How optometry can prevent serious harm from falls
- Help patients see the light when driving at night
- Nascent AI technology mixed results
- Helping aging Americans see the future
- Hand Eye Coordination and Batting
- Some ophthalmic drugs inadvisable for breastfeeding patients
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- Mediterranean diet
- Summer Camp
- Pool of knowledge Educate public on swimming and eye safety
- Gene-editing technology worth keeping an eye on
- When cancer Rxs affect ocular Dxs
- The Pharmacology of Allergies
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- Video-game vision therapy
- Olympics pique interest in winter eye care for athletes
- prevent eye-related injuries from sports and recreation
- Interventions in adulthood can improve binocular disorders
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- All eyes on dry eye
- Potential new antimicrobial ingredient for multipurpose disinfectant solutions
- AOA releases new evidence based guideline for pediatric eye care
- help stub out smoking
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- Children and Contact Lenses
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- Study underscores optometrys role in improving aging patients quality of life
- Wildfires and Ocular Health
- When driving becomes dangerous
- Blinded by video games
- Blue Light and Kids Sleep
- Kids and Devices
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- Tea Study
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- How to examine patients with special needs
Butt in: Ask patients about nicotine use
December 7, 2017
Study links vaping in teens to increased use of nicotine—a major risk factor for age-related macular degeneration.
A new study links the use of electronic cigarettes (vaping) among teenagers to more vaping and cigarette smoking.
Not only is smoking an irritant to the eyes, but it also is a major risk factor for age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and is the leading cause of preventable disease in the U.S. In the study, which appeared in the December 2017 issue of JAMA Pediatrics, students at 10 Los Angeles high schools were surveyed about their use of e-cigarettes.
The study looked at e-juice or the varying concentrations of nicotine, an addictive drug, in e-cigarettes in a cohort study of 181 students. Nicotine concentrations in e-cigarettes can range from 0 to more than 25 milligrams/milliliters.
"Among the adolescent e-cigarette users in this study, use of e-cigarettes with higher nicotine concentrations at baseline was associated with progression of smoking and vaping frequency and intensity at 6-month follow-up," researchers at the University of Southern California wrote.
"Given the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's 2016 Deeming Rule," they add, "the results of this study provide preliminary evidence that regulatory policies addressing nicotine concentration levels in e-cigarette products used by adolescents may affect progression of combustible cigarette and e-cigarette use among youths."
Researchers also noted that exposure to higher levels of nicotine during early adolescence "increases the risk for nicotine dependence and adversely affects attentional processes."
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, e-cigarettes were more popular among middle- and high-school students than combustible cigarettes.
Ask patients about smoking—and vaping
For more than a decade, Daniel Bintz, O.D., who practices in Elk City, Oklahoma, has been educating his patients about smoking's effect on their health. Like Dr. Bintz, doctors of optometry should ask patients these questions:
- Do you smoke?
- Are you a current or former smoker? Never smoked?
- How much do you smoke?
A member of the AOA Health Promotions Committee, Dr. Bintz also queries patients about vaping. Doctors do have a role in counseling patients on habits and behaviors that promote better health.
"We treat any tobacco or nicotine use the same when discussing cessation with patients," Dr. Bintz says. "E-cigarettes haven't been around long enough to positively be linked to AMD, but I believe the AMD studies implicate nicotine as the culprit because it constricts blood vessels. E-cigarettes are a huge problem especially because they were essentially unregulated for the first few years.
"Many studies mimic this onethat it's a 'gateway' drug device to make nicotine more attractive and flavorful for kids, who then at some point will typically become traditional tobacco users. The only thing that makes this less harmful is the second-hand 'smoke' is not nearly as deadly as it is with traditional tobacco use."
Smoking resources:
- Click here to view the AOA fact sheet "Smoking, Vaping and Your Eyes".
- Click here for government smoking cessation resources.
- Learn how e-cigarettes work.
- Read more about use among youth and young adults from the surgeon general.