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Secondhand smoke damages lungs, MRIs
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Newswise — It’s not a smoking gun, but it’s smoking-related,
and it’s there in bright medical images:
evidence of microscopic structural damage
deep in the lungs, caused by secondhand
cigarette smoke. For the first time,
researchers have identified lung injury to
nonsmokers that was long suspected, but not
previously detectable with medical imaging
tools.
The researchers suggest that their findings may strengthen
public health efforts to restrict secondhand
smoke.
“We used a special type of magnetic resonance imaging to find
these structural changes in the lungs,” said
study leader Chengbo Wang, Ph.D., a magnetic
resonance physicist in the Department of
Radiology at The Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia. “Almost one-third of
nonsmokers who had been exposed to
secondhand cigarette smoke for a long time
developed these structural changes.”
Formerly at the University of Virginia, Wang
collaborated with radiology researchers at
that institution, where they acquired the
MRIs from adult smokers and nonsmokers.
Wang presented the team’s findings in Chicago at the annual
meeting of the Radiological Society of North
America. Although the participants in the
research study were adults, Wang said the
results have implications for the 35 percent
of American children who live in homes where
regular smoking occurs.
The researchers studied 60 adults between ages 41 and 79, 45
of whom had never smoked. The 45 non-smokers
were divided into groups with low and high
exposure to secondhand smoke; the
high-exposure subjects had lived with a
smoker for at least 10 years, often during
childhood. The 15 current or former smokers
formed a positive control group.
The research team prepared an isotope of helium called
helium-3 by polarizing it to make it more
visible in the MRI. Researchers diluted the
helium in nitrogen and had research subjects
inhale the mixture. Unlike ordinary MRIs,
this MRI machine measured diffusion, the
movement of helium atoms, over 1.5 seconds.
The helium atoms moved a greater distance
than in the lungs of normal subjects,
indicating the presence of holes and
expanded spaces within the alveoli, tiny
sacs within the lungs.
The researchers found that almost one-third of the
non-smokers with high exposure to secondhand
smoke had structural changes in their lungs
similar to those found in the smokers. “We
interpreted those changes as early signs of
lung damage, representing very mild forms of
emphysema,” said Wang. Emphysema, a lung
disease that is a major cause of death in
the U.S., is commonly found in heavy
smokers.
The researchers also found a seemingly paradoxical result
among two-thirds of the high-exposure group
of non-smokers—diffusion measurements that
were lower than those found in the
low-exposure group. Although these findings
require more study, said Wang, they may
reflect a narrowing in airways caused by
early stages of another lung disease,
chronic bronchitis.
“To our knowledge, this is the first imaging study to find
lung damage in non-smokers heavily exposed
to secondhand smoke,” said Wang. “We hope
our work strengthens the efforts of
legislators and policymakers to limit public
exposure to secondhand smoke.”
The study received financial support from
the National Heart, Lung and Blood
Institute, the Flight Attendant Medical
Research Institute, the Commonwealth of
Virginia Technology Research Fund, and
Siemens Medical Solutions.
Wang’s co-authors were Talissa A. Altes, M.D., and Kai
Ruppert, Ph.D., now of the Children’s
Hospital Radiology Department; and G. Wilson
Miller, Ph.D., Eduard E. deLange, M.D.,
Jaime F. Mata, Ph.D., Gordon D. Cates, Jr.,
Ph.D., and John P. Mugler III, Ph.D., all of
the University of Virginia Department of
Radiology. Drs. Wang, Altes, and Ruppert
were previously at the University of
Virginia as well.
About The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia: The Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia was founded in 1855
as the nation's first pediatric hospital.
Through its long-standing commitment to
providing exceptional patient care, training
new generations of pediatric healthcare
professionals and pioneering major research
initiatives, Children's Hospital has
fostered many discoveries that have
benefited children worldwide. Its pediatric
research program is among the largest in the
country, ranking third in National
Institutes of Health funding. In addition,
its unique family-centered care and public
service programs have brought the 430-bed
hospital recognition as a leading advocate
for children and adolescents. For more
information, visit http://www.chop.edu.
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