The Borneo Post

Research shows lasting effects of smoking after quitting

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Researcher­s are still discoverin­g how smoking continues to harm people’s health even years after they quit, with a new study on Wednesday revealing tobacco’s lasting effect on the immune system.

Despite the tobacco industry long fighting to conceal the dangers of smoking, tobacco is now known to kill more than eight million people globally a year, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

But the myriad of ways the habit damages bodies are still coming to light.

The new study, published in the journal Nature, found that smoking alters the immune system, which protect bodies from infection, for far longer than previously thought.

It particular­ly highlighte­d changes to what is called adaptive immunity, which is built up over time as the body’s specialise­d cells remember how to fight back against foreign pathogens they have encountere­d before.

The findings were based on analysing blood and other samples taken from 1,000 healthy people in France starting from more than a decade ago.

Smoking was found to have more influence on adaptive immunity than other factors such as amount of sleep or physical activity, the researcher­s said.

The study also confirmed previous research which has shown smoking’s effect on “innate immunity,” which is the body’s first line of defence against invading pathogens.

While innate immunity rebounded immediatel­y after people stopping smoking, adaptive immunity remained effected for years, even decades after quitting, the study said.

The sample size was too small to give a precise timeline for how long these changes last.

The researcher­s emphasised that the effect does wear off - so the sooner people quit the better.

Of course, it is still better ‘for long term immunity to never start smoking’, lead study author Violaine Saint-Andre of France’s Pasteur Institute told a press conference.

The researcher­s could not say for sure what consequenc­es these changes may have on health. But they hypothesis­ed that it could affect people’s risk of infections, cancer or autoimmune diseases.

The sooner the better

Another study, published last week in the journal NEJM Evidence, aimed to determine how much quitting smoking was linked to a lower risk of disease and dying early.

It covered 1.5 million people across the United States, Canada, Norway and the UK, some of them active smokers, some who never started - and everyone in between.

When people quit smoking, it took 10 years for their average life expectancy to return to the same level as non-smokers, according to the study.

Again, the researcher­s emphasised the importance of quitting as soon as possible - some benefits were evident as early as three years after kicking the habit.

The effect was noticeable no matter what age people quit, however the benefits were more pronounced for those under 40.

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? New study found that smoking alters the immune system for far longer than previously thought.
— AFP file photo New study found that smoking alters the immune system for far longer than previously thought.

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