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335728 tn?1331414412

Smoking and MS...yeah I know, I got tired of hearing it too but FYI...

Smoking may speed worsening of multiple sclerosis
Updated Wed. Jul. 15 2009 8:54 AM ET

CTV.ca News Staff

Multiple sclerosis patients who smoke seem to decline faster, a new study in the Archives of Neurology suggests.

The study also noticed that smokers with MS were more likely to have the progressive form of the disease, in which symptoms steadily get worse, rather than the relapsing-remitting form, in which a person has MS symptoms intermittently.

The good news is that quitting smoking may delay the progression of MS in patients, the study authors say.

It's already known that smokers are at higher risk of developing MS. But the effect of smoking on the progress of MS has remained uncertain.

So Brian C. Healy of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School assembled a team who studied 1,465 patients who had MS, including some who were current smokers, others who were previous smokers and some who had never smoked.

The progression of the patients' disease was assessed for just over three years both by tracking symptoms and with MRI imaging.

At the study's outset, the smokers had more disability, more severe disease, and more atrophy in their brains.

Of the 891 patients who stayed in the study, 72 saw their MS progress to the worse disease form: 20 of 154 smokers, 20 of 237 ex-smokers, and 32 of 500 never-smokers.

The smokers were 2.4 times as likely as non-smokers to have primary progressive MS. Those who had relapsing-remitting disease were 2.5 times more likely than never-smokers to develop secondary progressive MS during the follow-up period

The MRI scans showed that over time, smokers had a faster increase in the total amount of injured brain tissue and their degree of brain atrophy.

The mechanism through which cigarette smoking could worsen MS isn't clear.

The authors note some components of cigarette smoke are known to have toxic effects on brain and neural tissue. For example, cyanides have been found to destroy nerve cells' myelin coating (a characteristic feature of MS) in animals.

Smoking might also have effects on the immune system. As well, smoking increases the frequency and duration of respiratory infections, "which have been linked to risk of MS and to the occurrence of MS relapses," the authors write.

The authors say their findings suggest that patients with MS who quit smoking "may not only reduce their risk of smoking-related diseases but also delay the progression of MS."

I myself have quit for two years now and I would never start up again...can't breathe anyway but this might give some MS patients think about quitting as well...don't want to nag, just want to inform.

Lots of Hugs,
Rena
4 Responses
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335728 tn?1331414412
Glad I could be of some help...I hope!
Helpful - 0
147426 tn?1317265632
Hi, Kiddo!  Yep, I talked about this a year and a half ago when I came across another study from Great Britain that pretty conclusively showed the same thing.  I try not to keep shoving in people's faces, but it is an important thing that some of us can do to prevent more rapid deterioration.

It has been clear for many years that smoking increases one's chances of developing MS.  But, now it is even clearer that smoking may worsen your course.

Ooops!  I just realized that the study I quoted from back then was the preliminary finding from this same huge study, published in the journal "Brain".  Well, it turns out that their initial findings were borne out.

Take heed, friends.

Quix
Helpful - 0
198419 tn?1360242356
Oh, boy.  Here it is in black and white. This is a big population of MSers studied for 3 yrs! Wow!  Doc Q has written about this in the past, but wait til she reads this.

THANKS, Rena!  Need all the facts I can get so I knock it off.  

Congrats on the two yr. mark, honey. That's a major accomplishment.
ttys,
-shell




Helpful - 0
410281 tn?1254229064
I've seen this before.  I am un dx, but a smoker.  I was actually looking at the RRMS vs PPMS info today and posted about alternating symptoms recently. My symptoms kinda sorta seem to follow the PPMS pattern, I think, but some seem to alternate eachother too.  It's all quite confusing, really.

Anyway, thanks for the info. Not sure I can quit, though.

Be well,
Heather
Helpful - 0
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