Secondhand smoke damage in mere minutesApril 29, 2008
Just 30 minutes of secondhand smoke damages the blood vessels of healthy nonsmokers. Study author Christian Heiss, MD, currently affiliated with the University RWTH Aachen in Germany, and colleagues in California evaluated blood vessel function in healthy, young, nonsmoking adults after they were exposed to a half hour of secondhand smoke at levels commonly found in public smoking areas. The study participants also underwent similar evaluations after exposure to smoke-free air on a different day. The researchers learned that in healthy nonsmokers, even brief exposure to secondhand smoke resulted in blood vessel dysfunction and interfered with the activity of endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs), which are believed to play a key role in repairing blood vessels. The damage to the EPCs appeared to last as long as a day. Taken together, these findings provide further evidence that even a very short period of passive smoke exposure has strong, persistent vascular consequences. Researcher team is the first to describe the effect of secondhand smoke on EPCs in humans. A decrease in the number and function of EPCs has been linked to cardiovascular risk factors, including chronic smoking, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol. These findings have significant public health implications and should raise further awareness of the negative side effects of even brief exposures to secondhand smoke. Our results help explain why there is a big immediate drop in heart attacks when smoke-free laws are passed. Current findings regarding the adverse effect of secondhand smoke on EPC activity, and not just their number, are worthy of much further investigation, adding that the team has shown that where's there's smoke, there is indeed fire. Source: webmd.com Latest News:
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