Albuquerque Journal

Quit before 40 to help evade heart disease death

- BY LINDA SEARING

People who quit smoking cigarettes before age 40 may lessen their chances of premature death from cardiovasc­ular disease by 90%, according to a report in the Journal of the American Heart Associatio­n.

Based on tracking of 390,929 adults for about 17 years, researcher­s also found that, overall, smokers were three times more likely than nonsmokers to die of heart disease or stroke.

At highest risk were those who had started smoking before age 15.

In the United States, nearly 5 million teens and 40 million adults smoke, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC describes cigarette smoking as the country’s “leading cause of preventabl­e disease, disability and death,” saying it accounts for about one in five deaths every year. Inhaled cigarette smoke, which contains a multitude of chemicals, interferes with a range of body processes, such as causing blood pressure to rise and the heart to beat faster, reducing blood flow from the heart and restrictin­g the flow of oxygen needed by body tissues.

Besides cardiovasc­ular disease, smoking has been shown to increase risk for, or cause, such health issues as lung cancer, emphysema, chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, chronic bronchitis, diabetes, tuberculos­is, immune system problems, some eye diseases and more.

The researcher­s found that, for cardiovasc­ular disease, the earlier a person quit smoking, the more their risk of premature death declined. But the American Cancer Society says that “quitting at any age can give back years of life that would be lost by continuing to smoke.”

 ?? JEFF CHIU/ ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People who quit smoking cigarettes before age 40 may lessen their chances of premature death from cardiovasc­ular disease.
JEFF CHIU/ ASSOCIATED PRESS People who quit smoking cigarettes before age 40 may lessen their chances of premature death from cardiovasc­ular disease.

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