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Smoking Ups Your Risk Of A Fatal Brain Bleed

Discussion in 'Neurology' started by Mahmoud Abudeif, Sep 17, 2020.

  1. Mahmoud Abudeif

    Mahmoud Abudeif Golden Member

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    Smokers have a significantly raised risk of dying from a bleeding stroke, a new study warns.

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    For the study, researchers analyzed data from over 16,000 same-sex twin pairs in Finland. The twins were born before 1958 and followed for about 42 years (between 1976 and 2018).

    During the follow-up, there were 120 deaths from subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). This is a type of bleeding stroke that occurs under the membrane that covers the brain. The median age at death was about 61.

    Compared to nonsmokers, the risk of fatal bleeding in the brain was three times higher among heavy and moderate smokers, and 2.8 times higher among light smokers.

    The findings were published Sept. 17 in the journal Stroke.

    "Our study provides further evidence about the link between smoking and bleeding in the brain," co-author Ilari Rautalin said in a journal news release. Rautalin is a sixth-year medical and Ph.D. student at the University of Helsinki in Finland.

    Unlike previous research, this study found that high blood pressure, lower levels of physical activity and being female weren't significant factors in the risk of a fatal brain bleed.

    The paper didn't have data on nonfatal cases. And the researchers couldn't assess the impact of previous smoking on these brain bleeds, because former smokers and never smokers were combined in the nonsmoking category.

    Still, "this long-term study in twins helps to confirm the link between subarachnoid hemorrhage and smoking," said Dr. Rose Marie Robertson, deputy chief science and medical officer of the American Heart Association (AHA).

    "Not smoking, or quitting if you've already started, is an essential component of primary prevention," added Robertson, co-director of the AHA Tobacco Center for Regulatory Science. She was not involved in the study.

    A previous study of nearly 80,000 twins in Denmark, Finland and Sweden suggested that external risk factors, such as smoking, have a much greater influence on subarachnoid hemorrhage than genetics.

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