Influence of cigarette smoking on healing and relapse in duodenal ulcer disease
- PMID: 6136450
Influence of cigarette smoking on healing and relapse in duodenal ulcer disease
Abstract
There are conflicting reports on the influence of cigarette smoking on healing in patients with duodenal ulcer; some studies show an adverse effect on healing rate and others no effect. This study reports the influence of smoking on short-term healing and relapse rate in 135 patients with duodenal ulcer who were treated with cimetidine (90), ranitidine (25), and oxmetidine (20), all powerful H2-receptor antagonists. Ulcer healing and relapse were documented endoscopically and all studies were performed in a double-blind manner. In the short term, 95% of nonsmokers healed compared with 63% smokers (p less than 0.01) and there was a positive correlation between failure to heal and number of cigarettes smoked. During a 12-mo follow-up examination after healing and on no treatment, 53% of nonsmokers and 84% of smokers relapsed (p less than 0.01). These results show that smoking adversely affects healing of duodenal ulcer with H2-receptor antagonists and that continued smoking leads to a higher relapse rate.
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