Quitting
smoking is famously hard. However, according to recent findings, the sooner one
stops, the better. Perhaps today is the day?
Smoking tobacco, as most of us are well aware, increases the
risk of a wide range of serious health issues.
Associated conditions include heart
disease, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and
several types of cancer.
Despite many of these dangers being common knowledge, giving up
tobacco is challenging in the extreme.
That said, cigarette smoking is on the decline in the United
States.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), the number of people who currently smoke in the U.S. has dropped
from 20.9 percent of
the adult population in 2005 to 15.5 percent in 2016.
The fact that so many people are giving up also means that there
are now millions of people who used to smoke.
Former smokers investigated
Already, some researchers have attempted to find out how the
disease risk of people who used to smoke changes after they quit.
Earlier studies concluded that cardiovascular risk drops just a
few years after quitting. However, most early studies were based on relatively
small numbers of participants and there was often little follow-up to check
smoking status over time.
Now, thanks to a large new subset of people who used to smoke,
it is possible to get a better understanding of how quickly (or slowly)
cardiovascular health returns to normal. And, because more people used to
smoke, it is important to understand how their health might change over time.
To investigate, researchers took data from the Framingham Heart
Study. They had access to the health information of 8,700 people, none of whom
had any signs of cardiovascular disease at the start of the study.
The scientists followed each participant for an average of 27
years. During this time, there were 2,386 cardiovascular events.
They compared the cardiovascular health of people who currently
smoke, those who used to smoke, and people who have never smoked.
There are a wide range of factors that can impact an
individual's cardiovascular health. With this in mind, the researchers
controlled the analysis for as many of these variables as possible, including
education level, sex, age, decade of birth, diabetes, hypertension, cholesterol levels,
alcohol use, and body mass index (BMI).
Only time heals
The analysis showed that 70 percent of cardiovascular events
occurred in those who smoke or used to smoke the equivalent of 20 cigarettes
per day for 20 years.
Compared with those who continued to smoke,
individuals who had quit smoking within the past 5 years reduced their
cardiovascular disease risk by 38 percent.
They also showed that it took around 16 years from the last
cigarette for the risk of cardiovascular disease to return to the same levels
as someone who had never smoked. This is significantly longer than previous
estimates.
The team presented these findings at
the American Heart Association's (AHA) Scientific Sessions 2018, held in
Chicago, IL. The study was authored by Meredith Duncan, a Ph.D. student at
Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, TN.
Source: Medical News Today
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