Electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) and traditional cigarettes both pose risks to blood pressure and cardiovascular health, primarily due to nicotine, though the magnitude of risk differs significantly.
How Nicotine Affects Blood Pressure
Nicotine, common to both products, is a potent stimulant:

- Acute Vasoconstriction: Nicotine causes blood vessels to narrow rapidly and temporarily, increasing blood pressure and heart rate. This occurs after each use of either cigarettes or e-cigarettes.
- Sympathetic Nervous System Activation: Nicotine stimulates the release of adrenaline, further elevating heart rate and blood pressure.
Smoking Traditional Cigarettes: Major Cardiovascular Risk
Smoking combustible cigarettes presents far greater risks than vaping for long-term blood pressure control and heart disease:
- Toxic Combustion Products: Inhaling smoke exposes the body to thousands of chemicals, including carbon monoxide (CO) and tar.
- Carbon Monoxide: CO reduces the blood’s oxygen-carrying capacity. To compensate, the heart works harder, increasing blood pressure and damaging arteries over time.
- Endothelial Dysfunction: Smoking severely damages the inner lining of blood vessels (endothelium), impairing their ability to relax and regulate blood flow. This is a primary driver of chronic hypertension and atherosclerosis.
- Accelerated Atherosclerosis: Smoking promotes plaque buildup in arteries, leading to hardening and narrowing, further increasing hypertension risk and the potential for heart attacks and strokes.
- Sustained Hypertension: Long-term smoking leads to chronic elevation in baseline blood pressure, independent of the immediate nicotine spike.
Vaping E-Cigarettes: Concerns and Relative Risk
While vaping eliminates the combustion and many toxicants present in cigarette smoke, it is not harmless:
- Nicotine-Induced Spikes: Vaping still delivers nicotine, causing acute increases in blood pressure and heart rate.
- Potential Vascular Effects: Emerging research suggests some e-cigarette aerosols may cause oxidative stress, inflammation, and temporary endothelial dysfunction, although generally to a lesser extent than cigarette smoke. The long-term cardiovascular consequences are still under investigation.
- Unknown Long-Term Risks: As a relatively new product, the full impact of decades of e-cigarette use on hypertension and cardiovascular disease is not yet fully established.
Vaping vs. Smoking: Key Comparison
Regarding blood pressure and cardiovascular risk:
- Acute Effects (BP/HR Spike): Similar due to nicotine present in both.
- Chronic Effects & Overall Risk: Smoking traditional cigarettes carries a vastly higher risk for developing hypertension, heart disease, and stroke compared to vaping. This is primarily due to the toxicants generated by combustion.
- Harm Reduction: For established smokers who completely switch to vaping, evidence suggests a reduction in exposure to harmful toxicants and potentially improved vascular function over time compared to continued smoking. However, this does not equate to vaping being “safe”.
Conclusion
Both electronic cigarettes and traditional cigarettes can cause acute increases in blood pressure due to nicotine. However, traditional cigarette smoking poses a substantially greater risk for chronic hypertension and severe cardiovascular damage due to the inhalation of combustion products like carbon monoxide and tar, which cause persistent endothelial damage and atherosclerosis. While vaping is likely less harmful than smoking for these outcomes, it is not risk-free. Nicotine itself has adverse cardiovascular effects, and the long-term vascular impacts of vaping are still being studied. The best option for blood pressure and overall health is to avoid both nicotine products entirely.