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Increased Heart Disease Risk in Children of Smoking Parents

by Rathi Manohar on Nov 16 2010 8:54 PM

Increased Heart Disease Risk in Children of Smoking Parents
Children of parents who smoke at home are at risk of cardiovascular diseases, claims a new research study.
Smoking parents can put children at risk of oxidative injury - possibly increasing their risk of cardiovascular disease, according to Austrian researchers.

Oxidative stress leads to inflammation and an increased risk of vascular damage and narrowing of the arteries.

During cholesterol screening tests, the researchers found that children of smokers had higher levels of an oxidative stress marker than children of nonsmoking parents.

Children of smoking parents had 13.2 picograms/milliliter in plasma while children of nonsmoking parents had 7.1 pg/ml.

When parents quit, the levels of the marker significantly dropped to that of children of nonsmokers after three months.

The positive effect was more pronounced when mothers rather than fathers quit smoking and most effective when both parents quit smoking. The effect was not different in girls or boys.

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Source-ANI


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