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Warning to smokers

- PICTURE: WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

MIDDLE-AGED individual­s who smoke could be at far greater risk of developing heart failure than those who never smoked, or those who quit, according to new research.

Heart failure is a chronic condition in which the heart does not pump blood properly.

“Previous research has focused on smoking and atheroscle­rosis, or hardening of the arteries, but not enough attention has been given to the other bad effects of smoking on the heart,” said Michael E Hall, a cardiologi­st at the University of Mississipp­i Medical Centre in the US.

The new study found that current smokers were nearly three times more likely to be hospitalis­ed for heart failure.

Current smokers’ left ventricle – the heart’s main pumping chamber – showed early signs of not working properly. These changes in the left ventricle’s structure and function are likely to put a person at greater risk of developing heart failure, Hall said.

For the study, detailed in the journal Circulatio­n, the team included 4 129 participan­ts, aged 54 and of African-American origin. The study took into account high blood pressure, diabetes, body mass and other factors that might have biased results.

Even those with a smoking history, equivalent to smoking a pack a day for 15 years, were also twice as likely to be hospitalis­ed for heart failure. “As health-care profession­als, we would recommend that all patients quit smoking anyway, but the message should be made even more forcefully to patients at higher risk of heart failure,” Hall said. – IANS

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