If deadly diseases such as lung cancer alone hasn't been enough to stop your habit of smoking, try to make it the backbone of the health as one reason for quitting. Nicotine can aggravate the condition of pain in the back.
Researchers did a study involving more than 5,300 patients who experience back pain due to disorders of the spine and is undergoing treatment. For 8 months of treatment, researchers continue to monitor the condition of each patient.
People who had never smoked reported that a sense of her back which gradually gets better quickly. Patients who stop smoking during treatment, reported that her pain gradually decreased.
While patients who keep smoking reported that her pain was not looked likely to subside and require a longer time to heal. The results of this research published in the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, edition of December.
"The pain will increase due to exposure to nicotine, so someone must stop his habit of smoking so that her back pain condition does not get worse," said Dr. Glenn Rechtine, author of the study from the Department of orthopedics at the University of Rochester in New York, as quoted from ivillage.
This study supports the need for the program stop smoking for patients with spinal disorders. Back pain patients inevitably had to give up and leave his habit that does not.
Although the study found a relationship between smoking cessation and decreased pain, this does not prove that there is a causal relationship between the two.
Researchers did a study involving more than 5,300 patients who experience back pain due to disorders of the spine and is undergoing treatment. For 8 months of treatment, researchers continue to monitor the condition of each patient.
People who had never smoked reported that a sense of her back which gradually gets better quickly. Patients who stop smoking during treatment, reported that her pain gradually decreased.
While patients who keep smoking reported that her pain was not looked likely to subside and require a longer time to heal. The results of this research published in the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, edition of December.
"The pain will increase due to exposure to nicotine, so someone must stop his habit of smoking so that her back pain condition does not get worse," said Dr. Glenn Rechtine, author of the study from the Department of orthopedics at the University of Rochester in New York, as quoted from ivillage.
This study supports the need for the program stop smoking for patients with spinal disorders. Back pain patients inevitably had to give up and leave his habit that does not.
Although the study found a relationship between smoking cessation and decreased pain, this does not prove that there is a causal relationship between the two.