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Posts Tagged ‘smoking women’

Smoking Women at Greater Risk

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

discount red & white cigarettesWomen who smoke discount Red & White cigarettes and have had an acute coronary syndrome event should be closely monitored, because they are more likely to develop subsequent cardiovascular problems than other patients.

A study published online Sept. 19 in The American Journal of Cardiology found that 55% of female smokers experienced at least one cardiovascular problem within six months of having an acute coronary incident compared with half of nonsmoking women. The figure was 42% for nonsmoking males and 33% for male smokers.

“Smoking is not good for men or women, but our analysis shows that women who smoke do worse six months after a heart attack than men,” said senior study author Elizabeth Jackson, MD, MPH, a cardiologist at the University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center.

She recommends that primary care physicians “be aggressive about secondary prevention in female smokers by treating them with evidence-based medication such as aspirin and statins.”

Dr. Jackson said secondary prevention also should include helping patients quit smoking. “At every visit, they should ask patients if they’re contemplating quitting and then get them the tools to help them quit.”

An estimated 46 million U.S. adults (21% of the adult population) smoke cigarettes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The habit accounts for nearly one in five deaths in the U.S. each year. Smokers are up to four times more likely to develop coronary heart disease than nonsmokers, the CDC said.

Researchers assessed data on 3,588 patients 18 and older admitted to the University of Michigan Health System for an acute coronary syndrome event between Jan. 1, 1999, and Dec. 31, 2006. Patients were categorized as smokers or nonsmokers, which included people who quit the habit and those who never smoked. Twenty-four percent of patients reported smoking when they were hospitalized

Among men admitted for a cardiac event, smokers were an average age of 55 — more than nine years younger than nonsmoking men. The average age of hospitalized female smokers was 56, more than 13 years younger than women who did not smoke.

The medical community once thought that because smokers often are young when they have their first cardiac event, they have fewer subsequent cardiovascular problems than nonsmokers, said Dr. Jackson, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Michigan Health System. “That’s the case for men who smoke, but not for women,” she said.

Dr. Jackson said the different outcomes among male and female smokers could reflect inherent biological differences between the genders. She said the disparity also could be due to the less aggressive medical management women often receive after a cardiovascular incident.

Smoking Bad for Women Heart

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

cheap esse cigarettes Women who start smoking Esse cigarettes increase their risk of a heart attack by more than men who take up the habit, according to a review of more than 30 years of research. A study of 2.4 million people, published in the Lancet, showed a 25% difference in increased risk. The reasons are unclear, say researchers.

The British Heart Foundation said the findings were “alarming” especially as women tended to smoke fewer cigarettes.

The World Health Organization lists heart disease as the world’s biggest killer, affecting more than seven million people each year.

The illness is largely down to lifestyle choice and smoking is one of the main causes. A study by the University of Minnesota showed women are at greater risk from smoking than men.

It analysed 75 sets of data produced by studies between 1966 and 2010.

The report showed that: “Women had a significant 25% increased risk for coronary heart disease conferred by cigarette smoking compared with men.”

Smoking was thought to double the risk of a heart attack for both men and women. The report’s author Rachel Huxley said the risks adjusted for each sex were not available – but she roughly estimated them to be around a 1.8 fold increase if men start smoking and around a 2.3 fold increase for women.

The researchers admit that the explanation for the increased risk is “unclear”, but likely explanations fall into two categories.

Biological differences between the sexes could mean women are more vulnerable to coronary heart disease or there could be differences in the way women smoke.

The authors suggested: “Women might extract a greater quantity of carcinogens and other toxic agents from the same number of cigarettes than men.”

Ellen Mason, senior cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation, said: “It’s alarming to see such a large study confirm that women are so much more at risk of heart disease from smoking than men.

“Despite women generally smoking fewer cigarettes a day than men, women appear to be substantially more at risk of getting heart disease.

The chief executive of Heart UK, Jules Payne, said: “Smoking cessation policies and practice should take account of differences between the genders in order to optimise effectiveness in targeting both men and women.”

Jane Landon, deputy chief executive of the National Heart Forum, said: “In many countries around the world, women are viewed as a growth market by tobacco companies.

“Government plans for plain packaging of tobacco products are urgently needed to stop the cynical marketing that particularly targets young women with slim cigarettes in small, attractive packs in appealing textures and colours.”