| Wrinkly
smokers more likely to get lung disease
Premature
aging could be a warning sign, researchers say
Deaths
from COPD are increasing in most countries. The World Health Organization
(WHO) estimates it will become the third-biggest cause of death
worldwide by 2020.
June 28, 2006
- MSNBC
LONDON (Reuters)
- Smokers’ heavily wrinkled faces could be an early warning
sign of a serious lung disease, researchers said on Wednesday.
They
found that smokers with pronounced wrinkles are five times more
likely than those without marked facial lines to suffer from chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which includes bronchitis
and emphysema.
COPD,
a leading cause of death worldwide, is caused by smoking, which
also prematurely ages the skin. So researchers at the Royal Devon
& Exeter NHS Foundation in southwest England studied whether
there was a link between the two.
“This
data suggests that if you are a smoker and you are wrinkled you
are more likely to have lung disease,” said Dr Bipen Patel
who conducted the study published in the journal Thorax.
“We
found that cigarette smokers who had a large amount of facial wrinkling
were five times more likely to have COPD than smokers who were less
wrinkled.”
COPD
begins with a persistent cough and increased mucous. It eventually
leads to fatigue, shortness of breath and difficulty breathing as
the lungs are destroyed.
Because
the disease develops gradually, Patel and his team believe facial
wrinkling could be an a sign of the illness before it is diagnosed.
The
researchers studied 149 former and current middle-aged smokers and
compared how much they smoked during their lifetime and their sun
exposure, which also damages the skin.
Two
dermatologists scored the severity of wrinkling from photographs
of the smokers. Breathing tests and scans were also done to detect
any signs of COPD.
Unknown
link - The smokers who were the most wrinkled were far
more likely to have changes in their lungs suggesting COPD, according
to the scientists.
They
suspect there could be an unknown common mechanism linking COPD
and wrinkling.
“This
is the first time that it has been shown that the two are more likely
to occur together,” he added.
Deaths
from COPD are increasing in most countries. The World Health Organization
(WHO) estimates it will become the third-biggest cause of death
worldwide by 2020.
The
illness afflicts people over 40 who have been smoking for many years.
It contributes to other disorders such as pneumonia, heart disease
and stroke. There is no cure for COPD but treatment can relieve
the symptoms and therapies to slow its progression are being tested.
To
read more on this subject, please visit MSNBC
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