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Smoking endangers
bypass surgery success
By
Tommy L. Fudge, M.D.
Medical Director,
Cardiovascular Institute of the South/Surgery
A prominent
heart surgeon I know refuses to perform bypass surgery on any
patient who won't quit smoking, on grounds that smoking undoes
any good his surgery might accomplish.
That's a
little farther than I'd go to make my patients quit smoking. But
it's not unjustified. In fact, there's new research that
underscores the point.
A 15-year-long
study conducted by physicians in Holland disclosed that bypass
patients who were still smoking one year after their surgery
were more than twice as likely to need another such operation,
compared with patients who quit immediately after surgery.
If they
persisted in smoking for five years after their surgery, their
need for a second bypass was more than three times that of those
who stopped immediately.
The Dutch
researchers, in an article in the American Heart Association
journal Circulation, also reported finding a correlation between
continued smoking and an increased risk of angina (heart-related
chest pain) and heart attacks among post-bypass smokers.
Perhaps the
most encouraging finding was that those who quit smoking
immediately after their surgery had about the same post-surgical
success as those who had never smoked.
That suggests
that even if smoking contributed heavily to the blockage of
arteries that necessitated the surgery, by quitting, you very
quickly halt its harmful effects on your heart.
Of course, the
best way to maximize that benefit is to quit smoking before you
reach the point of needing bypass surgery. Quit early enough,
and you might never need such surgery at all!
©1999 Cardiovascular Institute of
the South
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