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Smokers Risk Frostbite,
Study Finds
Smokers,
who already risk cancer and heart disease, are more susceptible
than others to frostbite because their blood vessels do not expand
fast enough to warm chilled fingers and toes, researchers said.
The nicotine in cigarettes seems
to be to blame, slowing the body's normal responses to cold, the
team at Yale University in Connecticut found. Dr. Kichang Lee
and colleagues immersed the hands of smokers and nonsmokers in
water at 41 degrees Fahrenheit for 40 minutes.
The blood vessels of the smokers
were slower and less effective than those of non-smokers at cold-induced
vasodilation -- a biological response in which blood vessels expand
in response to cold.
After coming out of the cold water,
the smokers' skin warmed up more slowly than that of non-tobacco
users, Lee told a meeting of the American Physiological Society
at a joint conference in Washington called Experimental Biology
2004.
The effect held even when the smokers
avoided cigarettes for 16 hours, Lee, now at Harvard University,
said.
Reference
Source 89
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