Abstract

Cigarette smoking has been associated with increased risk of atherosclerotic diseases in hospital-based studies and in studies of middle-aged populations but not in population-based studies of older adults with and without clinical cardiovascular disease. We investigated the relation of smoking to carotid artery atherosclerotic disease, expressed as intimal-medial wall thickness and arterial lumen narrowing (stenosis) measured by ultrasound. Subjects were 5116 older adults participating in the baseline examination of the Cardiovascular Health Study, a community-based study of cardiovascular diseases in older age. With increased smoking there was significantly greater internal and common carotid wall thickening and internal carotid stenosis: current smokers > former smokers > never-smokers; for instance, the unadjusted percent stenosis was 24%, 20%, and 16%, respectively (P < .0001). A significant dose-response relation was seen with pack-years of smoking. These findings persisted after adjusting for other cardiovascular risk factors and were also confirmed when analyses were restricted to those without prevalent cardiovascular disease. The difference in internal carotid wall thickness between current smokers and nonsmokers was greater than the difference associated with 10 years of age among never-smoking participants (0.39 mm versus 0.31 mm). Among all participants, the prevalence of clinically significant (> or = 50%) internal carotid stenosis increased from 4.4% in never-smokers to 7.3% in former smokers to 9.5% in current smokers (P < .0001). These findings extend previous reports of a positive relation between smoking and carotid artery disease to a population-based sample of older adults using several different indicators of atherosclerotic disease.

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