Wahbeh Farah, Restifo Daniel, Laws Sa'ad, Pawar Anokhi, Parikh Neal S
Clinical and Translational Neuroscience Unit, Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute and Department of Neurology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Education and Research, Health Sciences Library, Weill Cornell Medicine - Qatar, Doha, Qatar.
J Clin Neurosci. 2024 Apr;122:10-18. doi: 10.1016/j.jocn.2024.02.013. Epub 2024 Feb 29.
Although the association of smoking with the risk of incident neurological disorders is well established, less is known about the impact of smoking and smoking cessation on outcomes of these conditions. The objective of this scoping review was to synthesize what is known about the impact of smoking and smoking cessation on disease-specific outcomes for seven common neurological disorders. We included 67 studies on the association of smoking and smoking cessation on disease-specific outcomes. For multiple sclerosis, smoking was associated with greater clinical and radiological disease progression, relapses, risk for disease-related death, cognitive decline, and mood symptoms, in addition to reduced treatment effectiveness. For stroke and transient ischemic attack, smoking was associated with greater rates of stroke recurrence, post-stroke cardiovascular outcomes, post-stroke mortality, post-stroke cognitive impairment, and functional impairment. In patients with cognitive impairment and dementia, smoking was associated with faster cognitive decline, and smoking was also associated with greater cognitive decline in Parkinson's disease, but not motor symptom worsening. Patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis who smoked faced increased mortality. Last, in patients with cluster headache, smoking was associated with more frequent and longer cluster attack periods. Conversely, for multiple sclerosis and stroke, smoking cessation was associated with improved disease-specific outcomes. In summary, whereas smoking is detrimentally associated with disease-specific outcomes in common neurological conditions, there is growing evidence that smoking cessation may improve outcomes. Effective smoking cessation interventions should be leveraged in the management of common neurological disorders to improve patient outcomes.
尽管吸烟与新发神经系统疾病风险之间的关联已得到充分证实,但关于吸烟及戒烟对这些疾病预后的影响,人们了解得较少。本范围综述的目的是综合关于吸烟及戒烟对七种常见神经系统疾病特定疾病预后影响的已知信息。我们纳入了67项关于吸烟及戒烟与特定疾病预后关联的研究。对于多发性硬化症,吸烟除了会降低治疗效果外,还与更大程度的临床和影像学疾病进展、复发、疾病相关死亡风险、认知衰退及情绪症状有关。对于中风和短暂性脑缺血发作,吸烟与更高的中风复发率、中风后心血管预后、中风后死亡率、中风后认知障碍及功能障碍有关。在认知障碍和痴呆患者中,吸烟与更快的认知衰退有关,在帕金森病患者中吸烟也与更大程度的认知衰退有关,但与运动症状恶化无关。吸烟的肌萎缩侧索硬化症患者面临更高的死亡率。最后,在丛集性头痛患者中,吸烟与更频繁、持续时间更长的丛集发作期有关。相反,对于多发性硬化症和中风,戒烟与改善特定疾病预后有关。总之,虽然在常见神经系统疾病中吸烟与特定疾病预后存在有害关联,但越来越多的证据表明戒烟可能改善预后。应利用有效的戒烟干预措施来管理常见神经系统疾病,以改善患者预后。