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Smoking Ups Infection Risk for Lung Disease Patients


TUESDAY, April 7 (HealthDay News) — Not only does smoking help cause chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), it may cripple the body’s immune response to bacteria that can worsen the disease, Canadian researchers report.

The finding, detected in a study involving mice, may influence how smokers with COPD are treated, the experts said.

“It is well established that smoking is the main risk factor for COPD. But our research also suggests that cigarette smoke substantially changes the immune response to bacteria, which means that patients with COPD who smoke are weakening their body’s ability to deal effectively with bacterial invaders. This may cause even further progression of the disease,” principal investigator Martin Stampfli, an associate professor at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, said in an American Thoracic Society news release.

In the study, one group of mice was exposed to cigarette smoke twice a day for five days a week for eight weeks, while another group of mice was exposed to cigarette smoke for four days. After the cigarette smoke exposure, both groups of mice received a dose of nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHI) bacteria, which causes many COPD exacerbations.

Mice in a control group weren’t exposed to cigarette smoke but were inoculated with NTHI.

Both groups of mice exposed to cigarette smoke showed distinct changes in their immune response, specifically an increase in inflammation in the lungs, after being inoculated with NTHI. They also had increased weight loss in response to bacterial infection and a shift in the expression of inflammatory markers.

The study was published in the second April issue of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

If further research confirms these findings, “they would indicate that treatment targets for smokers with COPD may be markedly different than in non-smokers. Smoking may change the underlying inflammatory pathways elicited after bacterial infection,” Stampfli said.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about COPD.

— Robert Preidt

SOURCE: American Thoracic Society, news release, April 7, 2009

Last Updated: April 07, 2009

Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.


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Comments (2)

The following content represents the opinions of Health.com users. It is not editorially reviewed for medical or factual accuracy. It does not constitute medical advice. See your doctor for medical advice.
  • John

    Smoking causes infection in the lungs and after some months it leads to cancer. So, to care of smoking cancer:-

    Related article:-

    http://www.easy16.com/smoking-cancer/

  • Roy B. Duck

    My wife Glenda has serious copd. She is 67 with emphesema. She is on oxygen 24 hours daily and is often hospitalized. She stays current on the medicatons her doctor gives her but any improvement soon goes away. What are we missing and what are the possibilites, a support group, some kind of new treatment, etc. If you have any ideas I would truly appreciate hearing from you. Thanks, Roy.

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