Doctors not pushing smokers with artery disease to quit

0
142

Smokers with narrowed blood vessels in their legs would do well to quit smoking, but many doctors may not be giving them enough support to do it, a recent study suggests.Smoking can dramatically increase the risks of peripheral artery disease (PAD), which restricts blood flow to the extremities and can lead to mobility limitations, amputations and heart attacks. For the current study, researchers examined data on 1,272 patients in Australia, the Netherlands and the U.S. with new or worsening PAD symptoms in their legs and ankles.Overall, one third of patients were current smokers, but fewer than one in five were referred to smoking cessation counseling and just one in 10 were prescribed a medication to help them quit.“Patients with PAD need to be more aware of the long-term risks of smoking associated with their disease because it not only leads to worsening of their disease, but also increases their risk of losing limbs from the disease and having heart attacks and strokes,” said lead study author Dr. Krishna Patel of the University of Missouri-s City.“Treatments for PAD such as stents and bypass surgeries often fail if patients continue to smoke,” Patel said by email. “Quitting smoking is difficult, but doing so will help halt the progression of their PAD disease and may even reverse some of these risks.”The study offers fresh evidence of just how difficult smoking cessation can be.Researchers checked with patients on their smoking status when they started the study and again after three, six and 12 months.After three months, the smokers’ odds of quitting were just 21 percent.Among smokers who hadn’t quit at that point, their odds of quitting over the next nine months ranged from 11 to 12 percent.Slightly more than one-third of people who initially managed to quit relapsed and started smoking again, the study also found.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here