Viewing
Own Clogged Arteries
Spurs Smokers to Quit
Excerpt
By
Melissa
Schorr, Reuters
Health
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Smokers who were forced to look at
images of their own hardened arteries are nearly four times more
likely to quit smoking than those who simply received counseling
to quit, Swiss researchers report.
In the study, smokers were shown ultrasound photographs of the fatty
plaques in their blood vessels.
"Showing a smoker evidence of a health problem which relates
importantly to his or her smoking makes him or her realize the
danger of smoking," study author Dr. Pascal Bovet, a senior lecturer
at the University Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine
in Lausanne, Switzerland, told Reuters Health. "It is possible
that this increases the motivation to quit smoking."
The researchers selected 153 smokers living on the Seychelles
islands who had received counseling to quit smoking from their
physicians. Bovet and colleagues randomly assigned half to undergo
ultrasonography, a screening method growing in popularity that
can show fatty plaques in the carotid arteries in the neck and
the femoral arteries in the upper thigh. Such lesions indicate
that the arteries of the heart are probably partially blocked
as well, increasing the risk of heart attack.
"Because this investigation can be done quickly (in 10 minutes),
is non-invasive and is not costly (about $40), this investigation
has a large potential to help classify patients at high risk of
having a heart problem," Bovet said.
The patients who had developed more than one plaque on their
artery wall were shown two photos of that thickening of the artery
wall. It was also explained to the patient how that damage could
lead to a heart attack or a need for bypass surgery.
"It is easy for the patient to see the problem on the photograph,"
Bovet noted. "A plaque really looks like a starting obstruction
and this can be explained within a minute. Patients show a real
understanding and interest of this. Smoking becomes then not just
a remote and hypothetical hazard but a current health problem."
Six months later, the researchers tracked down the patients
and asked them whether they had quit smoking. According to the
findings, published in the February issue of the journal Preventive
Medicine, only 6% of patients who had not seen an image of their
arteries reported that they had quit smoking, while 22% of those
who had viewed an image of their hardened arteries said they had
quit.
This finding suggests that use of scans could be cost-effective
if it helps motivate smokers to quit, potentially reducing the
high cost of treating later health problems associated with smoking,
Bovet noted.
"We propose that whenever this investigation is done to assess
the risk of a patient, we do not miss the opportunity to use the
results, when positive, to help smokers to quit smoking," he said.
"Considering the huge hazard of smoking, this intervention can
potentially be very cost effective."
However, for those who were informed that an arterial scan had
turned up no signs of plaque, there seemed to be no increased
motivation to stop smoking, with only 5% reporting they had quit
6 months later.
SOURCE: Preventive Medicine 2002;34:215-220.
Reference
Source 89
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