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Smokers at higher risk for
erectile dysfunction
London -
Smoking can shorten lives, and a new study finds it may also hamper
men's sex lives.
Researchers say men who smoke a pack
of cigarettes or more a day are nearly 40 percent more likely to have
erectile dysfunction compared with nonsmokers.
"Smoking accelerates atherosclerosis
and is a potent risk factor for heart disease. It just stands to
reason that what harms blood vessels in one area of the body harms
them in other areas, too," said Dr. David L. Katz, director of the
Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine.
He was not involved in the study,
which was conducted by British and Australian researchers, and
reported in the March issue of Tobacco Control.
In the study, the researchers
collected data on nearly 8,400 men aged 16 to 59 years who
participated in the Australian Study of Health and Relationships.
Of these men, almost one in 10 said
that he had had erectile problems lasting a month or more in the past
year. More than 25 percent of the men smoked. One in five smoked a
pack a day or less, and just over 6 percent smoked a pack a day or
more, the researchers found.
The researchers discovered that,
compared with nonsmokers, men who smoked one pack or less a day were
24 percent more likely to report difficulties maintaining an erection.
Those who smoked more than a pack a day were 39 percent more likely to
report erectile difficulties.
Other conditions associated with
erectile dysfunction included older age and cardiovascular disease.
Moderate drinking significantly reduced the risk of erectile
dysfunction, the researchers noted.
Katz said that fear of erectile
dysfunction might help motivate men to quit smoking. "Perhaps men not
motivated to quit smoking for fear of heart attack or lung cancer will
be motivated by this," he said. "It may be difficult to quit smoking,
but it almost invariably proves far more difficult to live with the
consequences of not doing so," he added.
Another expert agreed that smoking
increases the risk of impotency.
"Other studies have shown that
smokers are likely to suffer from erectile dysfunction," said Dr.
Joseph DiFranza, a professor of family medicine at the University of
Massachusetts. "It's nice to have another study that confirms that."
"Smoking certainly doesn't make you
macho," DiFranza said.
Results of another study suggested
that heavy smokers who also have a low dietary intake of antioxidants,
particularly beta-carotene, are at an increased risk for developing
the degenerative lung ailment known as chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease (COPD).
In their study, researchers at INSERM,
in Paris, collected data on the breathing ability of nearly 1,200 men
and women. They also collected data on blood levels of antioxidants.
While lung function declined over the
years of the study for all participants, those who had high blood
levels of vitamin E and beta carotene had significantly better lung
function compared with those whose blood levels of these antioxidants
were low, the researchers reported.
Over eight years, the researchers
found that the worst decline in lung function was among people who
smoked a pack or more of cigarettes a day and had low blood levels of
vitamin E and beta carotene.
Reporting in March issue of the
British journal Thorax, the researchers concluded that beta carotene
may reduce some of the damage caused by oxygen free radicals. In
addition, both beta carotene and vitamin E may help to reduce the
damaging effects of heavy smoking on the airways, they said.
"Subjects who sustain heavy smoking
and continue to have low antioxidant levels are probably at very high
risk of developing COPD," the researchers wrote. "These powerful
antioxidants may help to reduce oxidative stress -- one of the factors
thought to be involved in the pathogenesis of COPD -- and thus may
contribute to reducing the risk of morbidity and mortality related to
this disease." -- Health Day
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