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To: ameribbean expat

Smoking causes knee and hip injuries? Those “scientists” have been working overtime!


6 posted on 09/03/2016 9:49:51 AM PDT by cgbg (Warning: This post has not been fact-checked by the Democratic National Committee.)
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To: cgbg

No, but smoking can affect how quickly someone heals from the surgeries. A friend had a couple of surgeries on her neck due to degenerative disc disease. Her surgeon advised her to stop smoking. After her first surgery, she didn’t and it slowed her healing significantly. She gave up her habit before her second surgery and healed much faster.


60 posted on 09/03/2016 11:24:00 AM PDT by bigredkitty1 (March 5, 2010. Rest in peace, sweet boy. I will miss you, Big Red.)
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To: cgbg

“Smoking causes knee and hip injuries? Those “scientists” have been working overtime!”

First, let me say that I believe people have the right to smoke, if they wish, and to hurt themselves in this manner, if they wish. It’s a choice, and I don’t believe in the ‘nanny state’.

That said, it’s very important for people to understand that smoking has ‘systemic’ effects on the body that go well beyond tar in your lungs and nicotine’s pharmacological effects. Smoking causes systemic vascular inflammation and oxidative stress, increases the likelihood of platelet activation and thrombosis, activates specific gene expression pathways (e.g. induction of hypoxia-responsive pathways because of carbon monoxide), activates elastase in the lung and promotes mucous gland hypertrophy and increased mucous production - thus contributing to emphysema and chronic bronchitis, and is clearly epidemiologically linked to an array of malignancies - including malignancies of ‘remote’ organs one might not think susceptible, such as bladder cancer.

None of the above is conjecture. It is what it is. So, in the context of the hip and knee issues, it is not a stretch at all to relate smoking to decreased blood flow to the femoral head, which has a precarious blood supply to begin with - (think of Bo Jackson’s football injury which disrupted blood flow to the femoral head and resulted in necrosis of the femoral head and the requirement for hip replacement). It is likewise not a stretch to believe that smoking could decrease blood flow to knee ligaments, and/or result in the activation of inflammatory pathways that could contribute to the degradation of cartilage and tendons.

I could go on and on about the science, and the effects of smoking.

Personal choice, should remain that way, but is a bad choice.


68 posted on 09/03/2016 11:47:10 AM PDT by pieceofthepuzzle
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