Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0151744 (
myocardial ischemia
)
31,282
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The evidence that
ETS
increases risk of death from heart disease is similar to that which existed in 1986 when the US Surgeon General concluded that
ETS
caused lung cancer in healthy nonsmokers. There are 10 epidemiological studies, conducted in a variety of locations, that reflect about a 30% increase in risk of death from
ischemic heart disease
or myocardial infarction among nonsmokers living with smokers. The larger studies also demonstrate a significant dose-response effect, with greater exposure to
ETS
associated with greater risk of death from heart disease. These epidemiological studies are complemented by a variety of physiological and biochemical data that show that
ETS
adversely affects platelet function and damages arterial endothelium in a way that increases the risk of heart disease. Moreover,
ETS
, in realistic exposures, also exerts significant adverse effects on exercise capability of both healthy people and those with heart disease by reducing the body's ability to deliver and utilize oxygen. In animal experiments,
ETS
also depresses cellular respiration at the level of mitochondria. The polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in
ETS
also accelerate, and may initiate, the development of atherosclerotic plaque. Of note, the cardiovascular effects of
ETS
appear to be different in nonsmokers and smokers. Nonsmokers appear to be more sensitive to
ETS
than do smokers, perhaps because some of the affected physiological systems are sensitive to low doses of the compounds in
ETS
, then saturate, and also perhaps because of physiological adaptions smokers undergo as a result of long-term exposure to the toxins in cigarette smoke. In any event, these findings indicate that, for cardiovascular disease, it is incorrect to compute "cigarette equivalents" for passive exposure to
ETS
and then to extrapolate the effects of this exposure on nonsmokers from the effects of direct smoking on smokers. These results suggest that heart disease is an important consequence of exposure to
ETS
. The combination of epidemiological studies with demonstration of physiological changes with exposure to
ETS
, together with biochemical evidence that elements of
ETS
have significant adverse effects on the cardiovascular system, leads to the conclusion that
ETS
causes heart disease. This increase in risk translates into about 10 times as many deaths from
ETS
-induced heart disease as lung cancer; these deaths contribute greatly to the estimated 53,000 deaths annually from passive smoking. This toll makes passive smoking the third leading preventable cause of death in the United States today, behind active smoking and alcohol.
...
PMID:Passive smoking and heart disease. Epidemiology, physiology, and biochemistry. 191 25