While previous research has found that smokers and black people both
have higher risks of diabetes than nonsmokers and individuals from
other racial and ethnic backgrounds, the current study offers fresh
evidence that the amount of cigarette use can impact this risk.
Researchers examined data on 2,991 black adults who didn’t have
diabetes, including 361 who were current smokers and 502 who were
ex-smokers.
After an average follow-up of eight years, 479 participants
developed diabetes. Compared to people who never smoked,
participants who smoked at least 20 cigarettes a day, roughly the
size of one pack of cigarettes, were 79 percent more likely to
develop diabetes.
Ex-smokers and people who smoked no more than 10 cigarettes a day,
however, didn’t appear to have a higher diabetes risk than people
who never used cigarettes at all.
“Obviously, all smokers should be encouraged to quit,” said senior
study author Dr. Michael Hall of the University of Mississippi
Medical Center in Jackson.
“However, it is possible that decreasing the number of cigarettes
smoked daily may reduce the risk of developing diabetes in blacks at
risk,” Hall said by email.
Overall, 15 percent of the people who never smoked developed
diabetes, the study found. That compares to 20 percent of former
smokers and 17 percent of current smokers.
After researchers accounted for other factors that can influence
diabetes risk, smoking status alone didn’t appear to influence
whether people developed diabetes.
But then researchers took a closer look at how much people smoked
and found heavy smoking and more years as a smoker were associated
with an increased risk of diabetes.
It’s possible that smoking might cause diabetes because it can
damage the pancreas, a critical organ involved in helping the body
regulate levels of sugar in the blood, Hall said. Smoking might also
contribute to diabetes by causing inflammation, he said.
“People who smoke also have a tendency towards other unhealthy
lifestyle habits including drinking more alcohol, worse diet and
less physical activity,” Hall added. “Our study adjusted for as many
of these variables as possible and the results suggest factors
beyond those related to lifestyle may play a role in this
association.”
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The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how smoking might directly cause diabetes.
Another limitation is that it included only a small number of
diabetes cases, particularly among current smokers, the authors note
in the Journal of the American Heart Association. It’s also possible
that results from a study of only black participants might not
reflect what would happen among people from other racial or ethnic
backgrounds.
Once people get diabetes, smoking can make symptoms worse, said
Patricia Folan, director of the Center for Tobacco Control at
NorthWell Health in Great Neck, New York.
“Smokers who have diabetes are more likely to have serious health
problems, including: heart and kidney disease, poor blood flow in
the legs and feet that can lead to foot infections, ulcers and
possible amputation of toes or feet; retinopathy, an eye disease
that causes blindness; and peripheral neuropathy, damaged nerves to
the arms and legs that causes numbness, pain, weakness and poor
coordination,” Folan, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by
email.
Smoking can also make it hard for people to lose weight or avoid
weight gain, and obesity is also a risk factor for developing
diabetes and having complications from this disease.
“People who smoke often have a less healthy lifestyle due to their
inability to exercise as much as they like,” Folan added. “Smoking
impacts lung function and stamina, making it more difficult to
exercise and leading to a more sedentary lifestyle and weight gain.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2Gk8A7e Journal of the American Heart
Association, online January 12, 2018.
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