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      Effect of Smoking on Tibial Shaft Fracture Healing :

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          Abstract

          Of 146 consecutive closed and Grade I open tibia shaft fractures treated with cast immobilization, external fixation, or intramedullary rod fixation during a 4-year period, 44 of 76 (58%) tibias of patients who smoked and 59 of 70 (84%) tibias of patients who did not smoke had followup to union or followup beyond 1 year. The demographics, fracture patterns, and treatments of the two groups were similar. Two of the 44 patients who smoked had nonunions at the 1-year followup, whereas none of the patients who did not smoke had nonunions. Of the 103 tibias with complete followup to union, the median time to clinical healing for patients who smoked (269 days) was significantly greater than that of patients who did not smoke (136 days). Likewise, there was a 69% delay in radiographic union in the group that smoked as interpreted by a radiologist blinded to the two groups. Statistical differences in clinical and radiographic healing rates between those who smoked and those who did not smoke were observed for patients receiving intramedullary fixation or external fixation. Statistical differences were not seen in the clinical and radiographic healing of tibias treated with cast immobilization, although tibias of patients who smoked took 62% longer to heal. The current data suggest that tibias of patients who smoke who require treatment with intramedullary nailing or external fixation require more time to heal than do those of patients who do not smoke.

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          Prevention of infection in the treatment of one thousand and twenty-five open fractures of long bones

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            Cigarette smoking decreases tissue oxygen.

            Subcutaneous wound-tissue oxygen (PsqO2) tension in eight volunteers fell rapidly and significantly in response to smoking, and remained low for 30 to 50 minutes. Sham "smoking" had no effect. These data suggest that a typical "pack-per-day" smoker experiences tissue hypoxia during a significant portion of each day. The degree of hypoxia found in these subjects has been associated with poor wound healing in animal and human studies. The onset and duration of tissue hypoxia paralleled the well-established plasma pharmacokinetics of nicotine. This suggests that peripheral vasoconstriction, induced by the adrenergic effects of nicotine, may contribute to the observed decrease in PsqO2.
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              Risk factors for spinal osteoporosis in men.

              Risk factors for vertebral fractures due to osteoporosis were evaluated in 105 consecutive male patients over a four-year period. An equal number of men with Paget's disease, matched by age, who concurrently attended the same subspecialty clinic served as control subjects. The relative risk for osteoporosis, estimated by the odds ratio, was increased among those who smoke cigarettes (relative risk = 2.3; p = 0.01), drank alcoholic beverages (relative risk = 2.4; p = 0.02), or had an associated medical disease known to affect calcium or bone metabolism (relative risk = 5.5; p less than 0.001). Obesity was protective (relative risk = 0.3; p less than 0.001). As assessed by a multiple logistic model, the risk associated with smoking and drinking increased with age. The effects of these four major risk factors were largely independent of one another and were cumulative. Thus, spinal osteoporosis in men is frequently associated with recognizable risk factors, some of which are potentially remediable.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
                Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                0009-921X
                1999
                August 1999
                : 365
                : 184-200
                Article
                10.1097/00003086-199908000-00024
                10627703
                e96e37d3-311a-4538-8dd2-14f983d38760
                © 1999
                History

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