Abstract

BackgroundCigarette smoking is an established causal factor for atherosclerosis. However, the smoking effect on different echogenic components of carotid arterial wall measured by ultrasound is not well elucidated.MethodsMiddle-aged men and women who had IMT measurement ≥ 0.7 mm at baseline and follow-up were included (N = 413, age 40–60 years at baseline in 1995). Intima-media thickness of common carotid artery (CCA-IMT) and its components (echogenic and echolucent layers) were measured at baseline and in the follow-up examination 3 years later. IMT and its components were compared across current, former and never smokers. Individual growth models were used to examine how smoking status was related to the baseline and progression of overall IMT and IMT components.ResultsFor both men and women, current smoking was associated with thicker echogenic layer than never smokers; former smokers exhibited thinner echogenic layer than current smokers after adjustment for cigarette pack-years. Among women, current smoking was also associated with a thinned echolucent layer that resulted in a non-significant overall association of current smoking with IMT for women.ConclusionCigarette smoking is associated with carotid artery morphological changes and the association is sex-dependent. The atherogenic effect of smoking appears to be partly reversible among former smokers. IMT measurement alone may not be adequate to detect carotid atherosclerosis associated with cigarette smoking among middle-age women.

Highlights

  • Cigarette smoking is an established causal factor for atherosclerosis

  • Current smoking association with overall intima-medial thickness (IMT) and IMT components Among women, current smokers exhibited thicker echogenic (p = 0.001) but thinner echolucent layers compared to never smokers (p = 0.03)

  • This study examined carotid arterial morphological associations detected by ultrasonography with cigarette smoking and smoking cessation

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Summary

Introduction

Cigarette smoking is an established causal factor for atherosclerosis. The smoking effect on different echogenic components of carotid arterial wall measured by ultrasound is not well elucidated. Cigarette smoking is a causative factor for premature atherosclerosis [1,2]. Applicable diagnostic measurements such as ultrasound imaging are widely utilized in recent years [4,5]. The B-mode ultrasonographic image for a normal carotid artery is characterized by two parallel echogenic lines separated by an echolucent (hypoechoic) space. The parallel echoes correspond to the adventitial and intimal layers of the arterial wall, and the intervening echolucent region represents the media [6], there may be systematic discrepancies between sonographic and histological measurements of intimal and medial thickness [7,8]

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