Smoking may feel like a cool idea– until it isn’t. Smoking actually does a lot more damage to you than give you bad breath and stained teeth. According to a new study, smoking increases the risk of a heart attack in all people, but much more so in young women.
British researchers examined data on more than 3,300 cases of acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) that occurred in the Yorkshire region of England between January 2009 and July 2014.
STEMI is sometimes called a major heart attack and is caused by a complete blockage of one of the main heart arteries.
Previous research has linked smoking to nearly 50% of STEMI cases.
The percentage of smokers in the study who were current smokers was 47.6% of men and 46.8% of women.
Smoking increased the risk of STEMI in all patients, regardless of age or gender, but the risk was higher in women than in men, the study found.
The largest risk difference between men and women smokers was among those aged 50 to 64, but the highest risk increase in both genders was among those aged 18 to 49.
Smoking increased the risk of STEMI in all patients, regardless of age or gender, but the risk was higher in women than in men, the study found.
The largest risk difference between men and women smokers was among those aged 50 to 64, but the highest risk increase in both genders was among those aged 18 to 49.
Women in this age group who smoked had a more than 13 times higher risk of STEMI than those who didn’t smoke. Men in this age group who smoked had an 8.6 times higher risk than nonsmokers.
The findings were published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
There are several possible reasons why smoking leads to a much greater risk of STEMI in women than in men, according to the authors. One is that smoking may lower women’s levels of estrogen, which has been shown to protect against the narrowing of the arteries.
Also, men have larger heart arteries than women, which means that chronic inflammation caused by smoking may result in a greater narrowing of women’s heart arteries.
The authors noted that while smoking increases the risk of STEMI, the risk is quickly lowered if you quit.
“Our study found that smoking cessation, regardless of age or gender, reduces STEMI risk to that of a never-smoker, possibly within a month,” said study senior author Dr. Ever Grech a consultant interventional cardiologist at South Yorkshire Cardiothoracic Center in Sheffield.
“Patients who smoke merit encouragement to give up their habit, and this study adds quantitative evidence to the massive benefits of doing so,” Grech said in a journal news release.
For more information on smoking and smoking cessation, visit our Health Conditions page on BlackDoctor.org.
SOURCE: Journal of the American College of Cardiology