SYDNEY: Children
exposed to their parents' cigarette smoke are at greater risk of suffering
serious cardiovascular health problems later in life, a study showed Wednesday.
The Menzies Research Institute in Tasmania
collected data from a Finnish and Australian study following children first
examined 20 years ago who are now aged in their mid-30s.
It found that those exposed to passive smoke as
youngsters have less elasticity in their arteries, an indicator of poor
cardiovascular health.
Study author and Menzies Research fellow Seana Gall
said while it has been previously known that passive smoke was harmful, this
was the world's first examination on the long-term effects on blood vessel
health.
"We looked at blood vessel elasticity by
measuring the ability of an artery in the arm to expand and contract," she
said.
"We found that people who had been exposed to
parental smoking when they were children had less elastic arteries, an early
indicator of poor cardiovascular health."
Gall added that it was not explained by the
participants' own smoking habits.
"The effect was seen up to 27 years later,
suggesting a long-term and irreversible effect of passive smoking in childhood
on the health of arteries," she said.
"The chemicals in cigarette smoke interact
with the lining of the blood vessels and that seems to be causing an inability
of them to expand and contract properly."
The World Health Organization estimates that about
40 percent of the world's children are regularly exposed to second-hand smoke
at home, with 600,000 deaths annually caused by passive smoking.
"The highest prevalence of smoking is still
seen in those age groups that correspond with people first becoming parents, so
that's still a concern and we'd want to get the prevalence down in those groups
particularly," said Gall.
-AFP/sb
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