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Smoking
Increases Risk of Multiple Sclerosis
Excerpt by Cyrille Cartier,
Reuters Health
Smokers are up to three times as likely
to develop multiple sclerosis than nonsmokers, researchers said.
Researchers at the University of
Bergen in Norway and Harvard University in Massachusetts surveyed
22,000 people aged 40 to 47 from 1997 to 1999 and found the risk
of developing multiple sclerosis nearly three times higher for
men who smoked and about two times higher for women smokers than
for their nonsmoking counterparts.
"Cigarette smoke is a cocktail
of chemicals that are potentially neurotoxins," said Alberto Ascherio,
a researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health, who worked
on the study.
However, when asked specifically
how smoking triggers the disease, Ascherio responded, "Honestly
we don't know. That is why this data is important." He said more
research is needed.
The researchers found that most
of the 87 people in the study who had multiple sclerosis started
smoking 15 years before they developed the incurable disease.
Of the multiple sclerosis patients, nearly 24 percent had never
smoked and about 76 percent were current or past smokers.
"In order to be classified as smokers,
they had to smoke at least one cigarette a day, and the number
of years of smoking, in the total study population, ranged from
one to 38," Trond Riise, who led the Bergen arm of the study,
said in an interview conducted by e-mail.
It was not clear why male smokers
had a higher rate of MS than women, Ascherio said.
The study will be published in
the Oct. 28 issue of Neurology, the scientific journal of the
American Academy of Neurology.
'TELL THEM TO STOP SMOKING'
"Putting all the studies together,
I feel pretty confident to say that, at this point, smoking increases
the risk of multiple sclerosis," Ascherio said.
Gary Franklin at the University
of Washington School of Public Health and Community Medicine in
Seattle said the effect of smoking on multiple sclerosis was not
extremely high.
"It's not like the relative risk
of smoking and lung cancer," where people are three to five times
more susceptible of getting the cancer if they smoke, he said.
However, Franklin, who wrote an
editorial accompanying the study, continued, "if I had a patient
who was maybe at risk for MS because someone else had it in the
family, ... and were smoking, I'd probably tell them to stop smoking."
Stephen Reingold, vice president
for research programs at the National Multiple Sclerosis Society,
said smoking is one factor that could trigger multiple sclerosis
in people genetically susceptible to developing it.
"The disease is not caused by smoking,"
Reingold said. "When we think about MS, we think about genetic
factors and we think about risk co-factors that may be infectious,
possibly environmental, and, as in the case of this, behavioral."
One of the most common neurological
diseases in young people, multiple sclerosis disproportionately
affects young women of northern European heritage, according to
the American Academy of Neurology.
In a previous study, Ascherio found
that one in about 200 women in the United States risk developing
the disease, in which immune cells mistakenly attack and destroy
myelin, the fatty material that insulates nerve fibers.
Common symptoms include vision
loss, numbness, fatigue and paralysis. MS is not fatal but can
seriously disable patients.
Reference
Source 89
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