Lio isn't a medication. It's a behavioral tool — designed around three decades of peer-reviewed research on what actually drives the urge to reach for a cigarette, vape, or pouch. This page is where we show our work: the science behind why hand-to-mouth replacement works, exactly what's inside our cores, and what an independent Dutch laboratory found when they put Lio under a mass spectrometer.
For most of the last fifty years, the standard model of nicotine addiction was simple: the chemical hooks you, remove the chemical and you'll quit. That model is why patches, gum, and lozenges exist. It's also why most people relapse.
Decades of research at Duke University, Queen Mary University of London, and the University of Pittsburgh point to a second half of the habit — the sensorimotor half — that the chemical-only model can't reach. Three components, each independently studied, each independently effective:
Lio gives you all three — without combustion, vapor, heating, nicotine, or any chemical mechanism that requires medical oversight.
Each page below is its own deep-dive — written for the reader who wants to verify, not skim.
Every aromatic compound by name. Every carrier disclosed. Three plant families. Eight things we'll never put in.
Six peer-reviewed studies from Duke, Queen Mary, Pittsburgh, Kyung Hee — the body of work that informed how Lio is designed.
GC-MS, run in triplicate, four days of simulated use, measured against European exposure thresholds. The four findings — and what they do and don't say.
Lio is a wellness and aromatherapy device. Statements on this page have not been evaluated by any medical regulatory authority. Lio is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease, and is not a medical or smoking cessation device. The studies referenced on these pages describe the broader body of research on sensorimotor and olfactory craving science, and do not constitute clinical evidence regarding Lio specifically. Independent laboratory analysis referenced on these pages measured chemical composition against published European exposure thresholds and does not constitute a clinical safety determination. If you have or suspect you have a medical condition, consult a healthcare professional.
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