Exercise Can Help Reduce the Damage Even Current Smokers Face. It May Also Help Them Quit.
By Marc Siegel Special to The Washington Post Tuesday, January 3, 2006; HE01
My patient Neal Johnston,
66 followed my clinical advice and regularly ran on his treadmill. At
the same time, he ignored my advice to stop smoking. Though he had a
history of heart disease and emphysema, he would run almost every day
with a cigarette dangling from his mouth.
I tried various established
methods to help him quit: the antidepressant medication Wellbutrin,
which decreases cravings; the nicotine patch; and hypnosis. Of course,
I also subjected him to regular lectures about the dangers of smoking
and the benefits of quitting. Nothing worked.
Johnston's vigorous
physical activity was unusual for a smoker, a group that studies have
shown engages in little exercise and generally has poorer sleeping and
eating habits than the general population. Smokers' poor lifestyles, in
addition to the toxins in the smoke, are co-factors in their poor
health outcomes, which include increased risk of cardiovascular
disease, emphysema, lung and other cancers, and premature death.
But it turns out that, by
running and smoking, Neal was doing more than acting in a paradoxical
fashion. Smokers who exercise reduce some of the harms that smoking
causes -- and working out may, preliminary research suggests, help them
quit.
Last year a study in the
journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention looked at
7,000 current and former smokers and found a marked reduction in cancer
occurrence and mortality in those who exercised regularly and
vigorously, even among current smokers. For example, there was a 25
percent reduction in cancer deaths in the 54- to 62-year-old smokers
who followed a workout program compared to those who did not exercise.
The study is among several that shows exercise has a positive effect
even in heavy smokers.
A third of all smokers
engage in physical activity at least three times a week, according to
the 2003 National Health Interview study conducted by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). That's less than the 41 percent
of nonsmokers who exercise regularly. (The CDC reported in 2003 that 22
percent of the population smokes.)
Exercise can help protect
against some cancers simply by regulating a person's weight. High
caloric intake combined with low energy output in non-exercising
smokers can lead to obesity, as it can in nonsmokers. This in turn
increases smokers' already elevated risk of cancers of the colon and
rectum, prostate, endometrium, kidney and, among post-menopausal women,
the breast.
Smokers who exercise also
tend to eat better than smokers who don't, as a 2004 Virginia
Commonwealth University study emphasized. Improved diet is among the
recommendations the American Cancer Society makes for reducing cancer
risk. These guidelines advocate a diet rich in fruit, vegetables,
grains and beans, and low in meat, dairy products and other high-fat
foods.
In fact, studies indicate
that certain micronutrients found in fruit and vegetables may protect
smokers against the toxic effects of tobacco smoke. According to the
New York Academy of Sciences, a variety of nutritional agents,
including antioxidant vitamins, appears to reduce or inhibit the
cancer-causing properties of cigarette smoke.
Oh, Quit It
So exercise and its often
related dietary behaviors can reduce some of the health risks smokers
bring on themselves. But can these good habits also promote quitting?
The answer appears to be a qualified yes.
Exercise releases
euphoria-inducing endorphins, chemicals that may help break the hold
that smoking has on a person. The antidepressant Wellbutrin has a
comparable effect when it increases dopamine and noradrenaline in the
brain. The regular presence of one of the body's "happy hormones" may
similarly decrease the desire for a dangerous stimulant like nicotine.
A study published in the
Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences in 2001 concluded that regular
exercise increases the rate of abstinence from cigarettes.
The one-year study was
organized into two nurse-managed groups where both groups underwent
health education, behavioral modification, counseling and nicotine
replacement, but only one group was also prompted to exercise.
The exercise group showed a
higher rate of abstinence than the other and a lower rate of weight
gain. This echoed results from previous trials.
These findings are
promising but still preliminary. A review of several studies published
in the journal Addiction in 2000 concluded that larger studies need to
be done before it can be declared that exercise leads smokers to stop
smoking.
When the Smoke Goes Out
What has been shown conclusively is that those who manage to quit smoking, by whatever means, have much to celebrate.
Within a day, the body's
levels of carbon monoxide and nicotine decrease dramatically. The
senses of smell and taste improve, and a person's tendency to cough
decreases. According to the U.S. Surgeon General's 1990 Report on the
benefits of smoking cessation, the resting heart rate begins to drop 20
minutes after quitting smoking and remains that way for years. After a
few weeks, the blood circulation improves and the effort necessary to
take each breath decreases. Cilia (tiny hair-like structures that move
mucus out of the lungs) regain their normal function. The risk of
infection lessens greatly as a result.
The risk for pancreatic and
esophageal cancer decreases almost immediately. A year after quitting,
the risk of heart disease is reduced by half, and after 15 years, the
risk of heart disease and stroke is close to that of a nonsmoker.
According to the 1990 surgeon general's report, quitting smoking for 10
years cuts the risk of lung cancer to half that of people who continue
to smoke.
But there is an asterisk
attached to these positives: Dramatically improved outcome is
associated with quitting altogether -- which, not coincidentally,
involves an overall improvement in lifestyle, including exercise.
Former smokers tend to have
a healthier lifestyle, with less alcohol consumption, a better diet and
a higher level of physical activity than current smokers. Former
smokers are also more likely to practice preventive health measures and
to undergo medical checkups, according to the surgeon general's report.
A Norwegian study just
published in the journal Tobacco Control suggests that even more than
the toxins of smoke, it is the associated poor diet, sedentary behavior
and stress that appear to correlate with illness and premature death in
smokers. Those who smoked very little -- people who often share the
poor lifestyles of heavy smokers -- had risk levels similar to those
who smoked the most.
The study looked at 43,000
people from the 1970s through 2002 and found that those who smoked very
little (one to four cigarettes daily) had poor health outcomes. These
light smokers were three times more likely to die of heart disease than
nonsmokers; heavy smokers were four times more likely. Light smokers
also had significantly higher death rates over the 30 year period --
1.5 times higher generally -- than those who had never smoked. Going
from zero to four cigarettes per day showed by far the greatest
correlation in the study between smoking and associated death rates. In
fact, it wasn't until cigarette consumption increased to 25 cigarettes
per day that the corresponding death rate from all causes reached three
times normal.
Since the amount of toxins
delivered to the body increases the more cigarettes a person smokes, it
is clear from the Norwegian study that other factors, namely the
lifestyles of smokers (even light smokers) vs. nonsmokers, play an
important role in the risk of disease and death.
Finally this year, Neal
Johnston quit smoking. He had developed one too many cases of serious
bronchitis, which caused difficulty breathing and required prolonged
courses of antibiotics.
He responded to a
particularly strong scare message I delivered to him one day, and he
just stopped. He went cold turkey, without the help of aids, hypnosis
or pills. He hasn't smoked in six months. He still exercises regularly.
Neal believes that regular
exercise helped give him the strength to quit. I believe that the
exercise helped protect him from dying. The preliminary research backs
my observation that exercise is truly a positive force in a smoker's
life, rather than an oddity.
I call Neal my test group
of one, because I have only a few smokers in my practice who exercise
regularly and judiciously. Many of those with heart disease and lung
disease no worse than Neal's were never able to quit, and they died
long before their chronic diseases progressed as far as his.
Certainly, a subset of
patients has been so devastated by smoking that any exertion may
present a strain too great for a severely damaged heart or lungs. Any
smokers considering beginning an exercise program must consult with
their physicians first. But for most smokers it seems clear that
regular exercise initiates a healthy cycle that is likely to improve,
and perhaps extend, their lives.
Marc Siegel is an internist
and associate professor of medicine at the New York University School
of Medicine. He is the author of "False Alarm: The Truth About the
Epidemic of Fear" and the upcoming "Bird Flu: Everything You Need to
Know About the Next Pandemic," both published by Wiley. Comments:health@washpost.com.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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