Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Young women smokers at chronic period pain risk

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Nov, 2014 11:41 AM
    Women who take up smoking during their teenage years run a significantly heightened risk of developing chronic severe period pain, finds new research.
     
    Starting smoking by age of 13 may have the greatest impact, the findings showed.
     
    “Smoking and early initiation of smoking are associated with increased risk of chronic dysmenorrhoea (painful periods),” said one of the study authors Hong Ju from University of Queensland in Australia.
     
    Cigarette smoking is known to constrict arterial blood flow, which could potentially cause pain.
     
    “Alternatively, it might have a direct effect on the hormones involved in menstruation, which may be particularly important before the onset of puberty and regular monthly periods,” the study authros noted.
     
    The researchers studied a large population sample of 9,000 women, all of whom were taking part in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health, from 1996 onwards.
     
    In 2000, when the women were aged between 22 and 27, over half (59 percent) were non-smokers and around one in four (26 percent) were current smokers.
     
    One in four women said they regularly experienced period pain every month. The prevalence of period pain was slightly higher in current smokers than in non-smokers.
     
    Some 14 percent of the women were categorised as the 'chronic' group, defined as a high prevalence of period pain of between 70 percent and 80 percent throughout the monitoring period.
     
    Compared with women who had never smoked, current smokers who had started smoking by the age of 13 were 60 percent more likely to fall into the chronic group.
     
    The study appeared online in the journal Tobacco Control.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Scientists discover new clues to brain's wiring

    Scientists discover new clues to brain's wiring
    In a step forward in learning how a developing brain is built, researchers have identified a group of proteins that programme a common type of brain nerve cell...

    Scientists discover new clues to brain's wiring

    New drug cures Hepatitis C in HIV patients

    New drug cures Hepatitis C in HIV patients
    In a ray of hope for patients infected with both HIV and Hepatitis C, researchers have found that a combination drug therapy cures chronic Hepatitis C in majority of such patients....

    New drug cures Hepatitis C in HIV patients

    How new dads' brains react to fatherhood

    How new dads' brains react to fatherhood
    Not just moms, a new dad's heart too pours for his or her toddler the moment he looks at him or her playing...

    How new dads' brains react to fatherhood

    Researchers make IVF safer for women

    Researchers make IVF safer for women
    Researchers could have just made IVF - an assisted fertilisation therapy - treatment safer for women after successfully using a new method to stimulate ovulation...

    Researchers make IVF safer for women

    Fish oil may save alcoholics from brain damage

    Fish oil may save alcoholics from brain damage
    Omega-3 fish oil could save the brain from alcohol-related damage and dementia by up to 90 percent, a new study says...

    Fish oil may save alcoholics from brain damage

    Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?

    Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?
    According to an alarming study by University of Exeter, tiny plastic particles polluting our seas are entering the bodies of marine creatures through their gills....

    Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?