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Tobacco
Smoke and Alcohol Harm Liver Worse as Combo
Newswise — Exposure to second-hand smoke and alcohol
significantly raises the risk of liver
disease, according to researchers at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
The finding adds to mounting evidence that tobacco smoke
and alcohol are worse for health as a
combination, beyond the individual exposure
risks, said Shannon Bailey, Ph.D., an
associate professor in the UAB Department of
Environmental Health Sciences and a co-lead
author on the study.
The study is published in the journal Free Radical Biology
and Medicine.
“This new data is a significant finding considering the
combined effect of alcohol and cigarette
smoke exposures, and the implications for
public health,” Bailey said.
The researchers reported on mice exposed to smoky air in a
laboratory enclosure and fed a liquid diet
containing ethanol, the intoxicating
ingredient in alcohol drinks.
Mice exposed to second-hand smoke and who drank ethanol had
110 percent more liver fibrosis proteins
than mice who breathed filtered air.
Additionally, the twice-exposed mice had 65
percent more liver fibrosis proteins than
mice who breathed smoky air but did not
drink ethanol. Fibrosis is scar-like tissue
in the liver that can lead to cirrhosis.
A study from the same UAB researchers in 2007 found the
combination of second-hand smoke and ethanol
increased the biological signs of heart
disease in mice.
Second-hand smoke kills 53,000 nonsmoking Americans every
year and is a known cause of lung cancer,
heart disease, low birth weight and chronic
lung ailments, according to the American
Cancer Society.
Excessive alcohol consumption is ranked as the
third-leading cause of preventable death in
the United States, according to data
collected by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
The new study highlights the need to further probe negative
biological impacts from single or multiple
risky behaviors, and the compounding effect
of environmental hazards such as second-hand
smoke, said Scott Ballinger, Ph.D., an
associate professor in the UAB Department of
Pathology and a co-lead author on the study.
In addition to measuring liver fibrosis proteins in the
study mice, the researchers looked at other
signs of advancing liver disease like DNA
damage, unhealthy cholesterol and oxidative
stress.
Contributors to the UAB study include researchers at the
Institute of Toxicology and Environmental
Health at the University of California,
Davis. Grant support came from the National
Institutes of Health
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