Can e-cigarette type devices be used to deliver other, more beneficial substances?

2014-12-29T20:56:40Z

In particular, could they deliver asthma medication in place of the nebulizer rigs that consist of an air pump, hoses and mouthpiece? Does anyone currently market such a setup?

2014-12-30T08:25:50Z

And once again Yahoo Answers proves its utter worthlessness. The only two who choose to answer know no more about the topic than I do.

Anonymous2015-09-07T05:30:46Z

Favorite Answer

If you know you can't get a legit, useful answer here, why even ask?

Prov MD2014-12-29T20:54:49Z

As of yet, no. They're not FDA regulated.

I mean, asthma inhalers aren't that different, in that they're inhaled. There's no point to using an "e-cig" to do what we can already do.

six shooter2015-06-19T04:01:04Z

are you stupid? i have one that has caffeine instead of nicotine to keep me up. so duh a simple google search would have answered your question

Anonymous2014-12-29T20:54:30Z

Sure, why not?

Anonymous2015-08-18T15:53:43Z

Retard