The Scotsman

Smokers at lower risk of Parkinson’s

● Study finds those who smoke up to 50 per cent less likely to get illness

- By CAHAL MILMO newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Smokers and those who breathe in “second-hand” tobacco smoke are at significan­tly lower risk of developing Parkinson’s disease than non-smokers, according to a new study.

Researcher­s led by a team at Queen Mary University of London found existing smokers are up to 50 per cent less likely to develop the degenerati­ve illness, which now affects some 145,000 people in the UK – around one in every 350 adults.

The study, the biggest of its kind and based on data from more than 220,000 medical cases across eight countries, also found for the first time a relationsh­ip between passive smoking and a lower incidence of Parkinson’s. Those exposed to the cigarette smoke of others were 30 per cent less likely to develop the disease.

But while the research also found the more an individu-

0 A link between passive smoking and a lower incidence of Parkinson’s

al smoked the lower their risk of Parkinson’s became, the authors of the study warned the “disastrous” harms caused by tobacco continue to vastly outweigh any benefit related to the neurologic­al disease.

The scientists said their research should spur on efforts to identify and isolate

what it was within cigarette smoke that was having the effect against Parkinson’s, with a view to developing a future preventive therapy.

Dr Valentina Goss, from Queen Mary University of London, said: “Our discovery is incredibly important from a scientific point of view and

should prompt basic science research aimed at identifyin­g the agent responsibl­e for this effect found in tobacco. Hopefully this will give insight for preventive treatment options.

“However, no-one would ever be advised to use smoking as a preventive treatment for Parkinson’s based on this research because of the disastrous effects we know smoking has on people’s general health.” The statistica­l study published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Epidemiolo­gy looked at more than 700 comprehens­ive case histories of Parkinson’s disease found among a European database of 220,000 patients.

It found even those who had once smoked, but given up the habit were at lower risk from the illness with a 20 per cent reduction in cases compared to those who had never smoked. The study found the reductions in risk were broadly the same regardless of gender or socio-economic background. The research provides the strongest evidence yet for the long-suspected protective effects of tobacco against Parkinson’s, but the precise relationsh­ip between this effect and the chemicals in smoke remains unknown.

Many scientists believe the most likely chemical preventing or slowing the onset of the condition is nicotine, which stimulates production of dopamine, responsibl­e for the brain’s pleasure response.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom