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Smoking
may now be considered an established Risk
Factor for ALS
Newswise — While previous studies have
indicated a “probable” connection between
smoking and ALS, a new study published in
the Nov. 17, 2009 issue of Neurology®, the
medical journal of the American Academy of
Neurology, states that smoking may now be
considered an “established” risk factor for
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), also
known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.
The findings come from Baystate Medical
Center neurologist Dr. Carmel Armon, an ALS
researcher and neuroepidemiologist, who came
to this conclusion using evidence-based
methods to perform a rigorous analysis of
studies examining the link between smoking
and developing ALS -- a fatal
neurodegenerative disease affecting the
motor nerves and the voluntary muscles.
“Application of evidence-based methods
separates better-designed studies from
studies with limitations that may not be
relied on.
The better-designed studies show
consistently that smoking increases the risk
of developing ALS, with some findings
suggesting that smoking may be implicated
directly in causing the disease,” said Dr.
Armon, a professor of neurology at Tufts
University School of Medicine and chief of
neurology at Baystate Medical Center in
Springfield. He is also a fellow of the
American Academy of Neurology.
According to Dr. Armon, identifying smoking
as an established risk factor for ALS has
three implications.
“First and foremost the findings provide a
link between the environment and the
occurrence of ALS, where none had been
previously identified with this level of
certainty,” said Dr. Armon.
“Additional implications are that since
smoking has no redeeming features, avoidance
of smoking may reduce the occurrence of ALS
in the future, and since some of the
mechanisms by which smoking causes other
diseases in humans are understood fairly
well, recognizing its role in the occurrence
of ALS may help pinpoint the biological
processes that initiate the disease,” added
the researcher.
The Baystate Medical Center neurologist
noted that focusing on processes at
initiation of sporadic ALS, and close to it,
may provide new avenues to treatment to stop
its progression.
“This has been realized in some animal
models of familial ALS, but not in humans.
The hope that these concepts may apply to
sporadic disease and change its outlook in
the future is supported by establishing the
association of smoking with ALS occurrence,”
concluded Dr. Armon.
ALS takes the lives of half of those
affected within three years of onset of
weakness, with less than five percent
surviving more than 10 years. Some 90-95
percent of cases appear to occur at random
(“sporadic cases’), with 5-10 percent of
cases having an affected blood relative
(“familial cases”).
An altered gene, several of which have been
identified, is implicated in causing
familial ALS. Prior to this report, no
external factors have been implicated with
this level of confidence as contributing to
the occurrence of sporadic ALS.
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