For Release: February 3, 2006
Contact: Gina Steiner
Donna Habich
American Society of Anesthesiologists
847/825-5586
QUITTING SMOKING BEFORE SURGERY CAN BENEFIT
YOU NOW– AND FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE
CHICAGO–Patients who stop smoking before surgery
not only optimize their fitness for a successful operation
and recovery, but here’s an added benefit: it could
be their best chance to quit smoking for good.
According to a new comprehensive review of existing
studies in the February issue of Anesthesiology,
surgical patients who are nonsmokers, or who stop smoking
prior to surgery, tend to fare better in the recovery
period than smokers. This is in addition to the benefit
seen during the actual surgery, when anesthesia is safer
and more predictable in nonsmokers due to better functioning
of the heart, blood vessels, lungs and nervous system.
Add to all of this another bonus: smokers who have quit
around the time of surgery may have fewer problems with
nicotine withdrawal after the operation than they would
have if they had tried to quit at other times. This may
be due to medications and therapies commonly used during
surgery and recovery, which may suppress nicotine withdrawal
symptoms. Even if patients do have problems with nicotine
withdrawal after surgery, they can safely receive help
such as nicotine patches.
“For people who have thought about quitting smoking,
the time of their surgery is a good opportunity to do
so. Abstaining from cigarettes promotes faster healing
and less risk of wound infection, plus the patient may
be in an ideal position to avoid some of the problems
with nicotine withdrawal and other discomforts associated
with quitting,” said lead author David O. Warner,
M.D., a Mayo Clinic anesthesiologist. “This increases
the chance for long-term success with smoking cessation.”
The article reviews the changes in the body caused by
chronic exposure to cigarette smoke, as well as changes
found in the initial stages of abstaining from cigarettes.
Both types of physiologic changes can affect the patient’s
response to various aspects of surgery and recovery.
This is particularly important information for anesthesiologists,
who oversee the medical care and evaluation of the patient
before, during and after surgery.
Dr. Warner chairs the new Task Force on Smoking Cessation
Programs of the American Society of Anesthesiologists
(ASA), a national medical professional organization of
more than 40,000 members. This Task Force will create
a new program to help improve the health of smokers not
only around the time of surgery, but for the rest of
their lives –another example of how anesthesiologists
are dedicated to the health and safety of their patients.
Patients who are preparing for surgery can check out
ASA’s brochure, “Anesthesia and You,” at http://www.asahq.org/patientEducation/anesandyou.htm
Approximately 23 percent of the adults in the US smoke
cigarettes, and millions of them undergo surgery each
year.
Editor’s Note: For more information about
ASA or anesthesiology, contact ASA at the above number.
To request an interview with Dr. Warner, contact
Lee Aase, Manager, Media Relations and Research Communications
at Mayo Clinic, 507-284-5005.
The American Society of Anesthesiologists is an educational,
research and scientific association of more than 40,000
physicians organized to raise and maintain the standards
of the medical practice of anesthesiology and improve
the care of the patient.
Since its founding in 1905, the
Society’s
achievements have made it an important voice in American
Medicine and the foremost advocate for all patients
who require anesthesia or relief from pain.