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Smoking

Smoking slows healing to the bones.

A bad habit just got worse. Orthopedists studying the hazards of cigarettes say that among its other ills, smoking also slows the healing of broken bones.

When a bone fractures, cells near the break produce a fibrous substance called collagen that patches the fissure. But carbon monoxide and nicotine in cigarette smoke limit the amount of oxygen that reaches those cells, hindering their collagen-making ability. Preliminary findings indicate that having just one cigarette can dramatically reduce collagen production for 30 to 40 minutes.

Dr. George Cierny III, orthopedic surgeon at Atlanta's St. Joseph's Hospital, studied the time it took 29 patients to recuperate from leg-bone surgery. His findings: patients who smoked regained their ability to walk an average of six months later than nonsmokers. "It may be that people smoking a pack a day mend their broken bones only while they sleep," says Cierny. "Eventually bones heal, but the healing takes a lot longer."

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#1 by not telling, Sep 29, 2007
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