Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2023)

Both Moderate and Heavy Alcohol Use Amplify the Adverse Cardiovascular Effects of Smoking in Young Patients with Hypertension

  • Paolo Palatini,
  • Lucio Mos,
  • Francesca Saladini,
  • Olga Vriz,
  • Claudio Fania,
  • Andrea Ermolao,
  • Francesca Battista,
  • Mattia Canevari,
  • Marcello Rattazzi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12082792
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 2792

Abstract

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Aim: To evaluate the association of alcohol and smoking combined with cardiovascular and renal events and investigate whether moderate and heavy alcohol consumption have a different impact on this association. Methods: The study was conducted in 1208 young-to-middle-age stage 1 hypertensive patients. Subjects were classified into three categories of cigarette smoking and alcohol use, and the risk of adverse outcomes was assessed over a 17.4-year follow-up. Results: In multivariable Cox models, smoking showed a different prognostic impact on alcohol drinkers and abstainers. In the former, an increase in the risk of cardiovascular and renal events was observed compared to nonsmokers (hazard ratio, 2.6, 95% CI, 1.5–4.3, p p = 0.27) with a significant interaction between smoking and alcohol use (p p p p = 0.011). Conclusion: These findings indicate that the detrimental cardiovascular effects of smoking can be worsened by concomitant alcohol use. This synergistic effect occurs not only for heavy alcohol consumption but also for moderate use. Smokers should be aware of the increased risk associated with concomitant alcohol consumption.

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