1 / 11

Smoking And Outcome From Traumatic Brain Injury

Smoking And Outcome From Traumatic Brain Injury. Olli Tenovuo Department of Neurology University of Turku Finland. Introduction. The cholinergic system is known to be frequently involved in the chronic sequels of TBI. Nicotine is a strong modulator of the cholinergic system.

nantai
Download Presentation

Smoking And Outcome From Traumatic Brain Injury

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Smoking And Outcome From Traumatic Brain Injury Olli Tenovuo Department of Neurology University of Turku Finland

  2. Introduction • The cholinergic system is known to be frequently involved in the chronic sequels of TBI. • Nicotine is a strong modulator of the cholinergic system.

  3. Purpose of the study To study • whether smoking history is connected with the outcome from TBI, • whether the response to cholinergic drugs depends on the smoking history in victims of TBI.

  4. Material and methods A questionnaire concerning the smoking and drinking history, the eventual response to cholinergic drugs and the subjective outcome from TBI was sent to all TBI patients included in a database of 1029 patients, treated at a neurological outpatient university clinic after 1.1.1993.

  5. Material and methods, continued • In total, 531 patients responded. • Data on injury severity (measured with Glasgow Coma Scale and duration of posttraumatic amnesia) and outcome (measured with the Glasgow Outcome Scale, extended version = GOS-E) were collected from the medical records.

  6. Results • Those who had smoked at the time of injury (n = 216) were significantly younger (p < 0.001). • The smokers showed a poorer outcome measured with the GOS-E, also after taking into account TBI severity and age (p = 0.03). • The subjective recovery between the smokers and non-smokers did not differ (p = 0.11)

  7. Results, continued • One-fourth (24 %) of the smokers felt that the effect of smoking had changed due to the injury. • In 83 % of these the effect had become more negative, and 25 % of those who had smoked at the time of injury had stopped smoking afterwards.

  8. Results, continued • The tolerance for alcohol had decreased in 52 % and increased in 5 % of those who had used alcohol after the injury (n = 424). • After the injury, 11 % had stopped and 36 % had reduced their alcohol consumption, but in 16 % consumption had increased.

  9. Results, continued • Altogether 28 % of patients had tried cholinergic medication, but the treatment response was very similar in both smokers and non-smokers (p = 0.71).

  10. Discussion • These results suggest that smoking at the time of injury may have a negative influence on the outcome of TBI. • TBI frequently lowers the tolerance for tobacco, and especially for alcohol. • Many TBI patients stop smoking and drinking after the injury, and although altered financial status may have an effect, the lowered tolerance has an apparent influence. • The treatment response to cholinergic stimulation does not seem to depend on smoking history.

  11. Discussion, continued • In theory, modulation of the cholinergicsystemby smoking couldaffect the brain’sability to recover • Thisstudysuggeststhatthismayholdtrue in humans, but the eventualrealtionshipmayalsobeindirect (e.g. smokershavingmoreabuseproblemsorlowereducation and thuslowercognitivereserve)

More Related