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Add bone damage to reasons for quitting smoking
Health News Feature

Health News Feature
Weekly news feature articles on current health topics that affect you and your family.

Add bone damage to reasons for quitting smoking

(HealthDay News) – The dangers of smoking -- especially cigarette smoking -- are well documented.

Leading the long list of hazards are lung cancer, emphysema and other lung-related ailments and a plethora of cardiac problems.

But for older people and women especially, the damage smoking does to the bones may need to be emphasized as well.

Muscles, joints and bones are all damaged by the various ways in which tobacco and nicotine poison your system, increasing the risk of bone fractures and then interfering with the healing process, according to a growing body of research.

"Nicotine slows fracture healing, estrogen effectiveness, and it counteracts the antioxidant properties of vitamins C and E, predisposing smokers to increased hip fracture risk," says Dr. Edward N. Hanley, chairman of the orthopedic surgery department at the Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte , N.C.

Hanley has reviewed research on the topic and has made presentations about the danger smoking presents to bone health to a number of organizations, including the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.

"Cigarette smoking is implicated in several musculoskeletal disease processes, including osteoporosis (bone-thinning), low back pain, spinal disc disease and wound healing," he says.

He adds that research shows the vast array of orthopedic problems caused by smoking include the following:

  • Cigarette smokers have more severe disc degeneration than nonsmokers.
  • Cigarette smoking weakens spinal ligaments.
  • Smoking reduces the production of bone cells.
  • Postmenopausal women who smoke lose bone faster than their peers.
  • Fractures take longer to heal in smokers.
  • Rotator cuff (shoulder) surgery is more successful in nonsmokers than smokers.
  • Surgical incisions take longer to heal in smokers, probably because the tissues are not getting enough oxygen.
  • Smokers have more complications after surgery.
  • Spinal fusion is delayed by nicotine in a person's system.

By interfering with the body's use of the hormone estrogen in women, tobacco use sparks several of the orthopedic problems.

"Estrogen is protective with regard to osteoporosis, and smoking neutralizes that protective effect," Hanley says. "It has something to do with interfering with the estrogen receptor sites on all of the cells in your body, and in essence slowing down the protective effect of estrogen on your tissue."

"Smoking increases the incidence of spinal compression fractures in postmenopausal women because they have less bone mass," he adds. "And literature has shown that smoking can even bring on earlier menopause."

Hanley reports that lower back pain and sciatica are far more common in smokers of both genders, especially in those who have smoker's cough.

One of Hanley's own studies found that back pain from work-related injury was more common among workers who smoked, with 50 percent of them reporting lower back pain, compared to 20 percent of nonsmokers.

The study also found that workers who smoked had higher rates of disabling leg cramps and severe back pain.

Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Michael McKee, an associate professor in the Division of Orthopedics at St. Michaels Hospital at the University of Toronto , says he often encounters the complications smokers face when their bones are trying to heal.

"The main thing in healing is for new cells to form and grow and to do that they need a good supply of oxygen and to be free of any potential poisons," McKee explains. "But smoking appears to reduce the amount of oxygen. In addition, there are literally hundreds of thousands of toxins in cigarette smoke, and studies have shown that there are some direct toxic effects from the nicotine on those cells."

"As a result, patients who smoke have delayed fracture union (the reuniting of bones), and it simply takes longer for fractures to heal," he says.

On the bright side, McKee says simply quitting can work wonders.

"What seems to be critical is if you're actively smoking at the time you're trying to get the bone to heal. If you're in a cast and you're smoking two packs a day, that's going to take a lot longer to heal than the average person," he says. "But to the best of our knowledge, if you stop smoking, then your risk of not healing seems to go down. There is still room to improve yourself by stopping smoking."

Long-term, heavy smokers who've already caused permanent damage to their arteries might not get off as easily, however.

"If the smoking has caused some hardening of the arteries, then a fracture to a peripheral part of the body, for instance the ankle, may not heal as easily because the blood supply is poor there from the underlying arterial disease," McKee notes.

Tobacco-related diseases claim the lives of more than 400,000 people in the United States each year, according to the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.

On the Web

The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons has additional information on smoking and musculoskeletal health.

SOURCES: Interviews with Edward N. Hanley, M.D, chairman, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, N.C.; Michael McKee, M.D., associate professor of surgery, University of Toronto and adjunct scientist, Keenan Research Centre of the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital; October 2001 American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons press release
Author: Nancy A. Melville, HealthDay Reporter
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