To ease severe back pain, quit smoking
Posted by Leslie Orr-Rochester on December 7, 2012
U. ROCHESTER (US) — Quitting smoking offers significant relief to people suffering from severe back pain, new research suggests.
Published
in the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, the study analyzed more than
5,300 patients followed for eight months during treatment of spinal
disorders and showed that cigarette smokers reported far more pain than
never-smokers or those who had quit.
Smoking cessation either
prior to treatment or during the course of care was related to
significant improvements in pain—a result that underlines the need for
structured stop-smoking programs among the legions of patients who
experience back pain due to degenerative disease, deformity, or
musculoskeletal problems.
“We found that people who stopped
smoking had meaningful benefit by reduction of their pain,” says Caleb
Behrend, chief resident in the Department of Orthopaedics and
Rehabilitation at the University of Rochester Medical Center. “The pain
improvement is in addition to all the other benefits you gain from
quitting.”
The relationship between pain and smoking is complex
and full of contradictions. Nicotine has analgesic properties, for
example, and yet clinical evidence shows that smokers are at higher risk
for developing back pain and other chronic pain disorders, according to
the American Society of Anesthesiologists.
Scientists already
know that nicotine interacts with a family of proteins (nAChR), which
have a key role in the central, and peripheral nervous system, and
control anxiety and pain. Prolonged exposure to cigarettes upsets the
function of these cells and eventually changes the way pain is
processed, as well as impairing oxygen delivery to tissues, predisposing
a person to bone and joint disorders such as osteoporosis, and inducing
inflammation and depression. Smokers with spinal conditions also tend
to have persistently more intense pain and more long-term disability.
he
new study notes a daunting fact: Nearly all people will experience back
pain at some point in their lives and many will seek medical care.
Because the socioeconomic impact of spinal disorders (cost of care and
lost productivity for patients) is so great, researchers want to find
out if improvements in pain could be achieved with a cost-effective
intervention such as smoking cessation.Researchers reviewed a
prospectively maintained database of 5,333 patients, who completed
questionnaires about pain at the initial doctors’ visit and at the time
of discharge from care. Patients were treated with surgery, or with
physical therapy, injections, over-the-counter medications, and home
exercise programs. Physicians counseled all smokers to quit, and
patients were referred to a smoking cessation hotline.
Of the
5,333 people, those who had never smoked or had quit some time ago
reported less pain than smokers or those who had just quit. By the end
of the follow-up period, the people who had recently quit or who quit
during treatment showed significant improvements in pain. People who
continued to smoke during treatment had no improvement in pain on all
scales.
Younger people tended to comprise the group of current
smokers and those who only decided to quit during treatment; this is
consistent with other studies showing that smoking is associated with
degenerative spine disease at a younger age.
Older patients tended to comprise the group who had never smoked or quit long ago.
The
rate of smoking cessation was 22 percent, and research shows that up to
36 percent of patients with painful spinal disorders are able to quit
with help from a structured program. A grant from the Southwestern
Medical Foundation was used to create and maintain the patient database.
Source: University of Rochester
For more information on back pain, please visit spechtpt.com
Thursday, September 18, 2014
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