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Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2000;57:341-347; doi:10.1136/oem.57.5.341
Copyright © 2000 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
Occup Environ Med 2000;57:341-347 ( May )

Vibration exposure, smoking, and vascular dysfunction

Martin Cherniacka, Jonathon Cliveb, Adam Seidnerc

a Department of Medicine, Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, University of Connecticut Health Center, 263 Farmington Avenue-MC6210, Farmington, Connecticut 06030-6210, USA, b Office of Biostatistical Consultations, c Department of Workers Compensation Claim, Travellers Property Casualty, One Tower Square 7PB, Hartford, Connecticut 06183, USA

Correspondence to: Dr Martin Cherniack, Ergonomics Technology Center, University of Connecticut Health Center, 263 Farmington Avenue, MC6210 Farmington, Connecticut 06030-6210, USA

Accepted 29 November 1999

OBJECTIVES---Vibration white finger (VWF), also known as "occupational Raynaud's phenomenon", is marked by arterial hyperresponsiveness and vasoconstriction during cold stimulation. The impact of tobacco use, and by extension stopping smoking, on the long term course of the disease has been inconclusively characterised. The objectives of this study included assessment of the impact of tobacco use on symptoms and on objective tests in shipyard workers exposed to vibration, and in gauging the natural history of the disorder after stopping exposure and changing smoking patterns.
METHODS---In a cross sectional investigation, 601 current and former users of pneumatic tools were evaluated subjectively for cold related vascular symptoms, and tested by cold challenge plethysmography. There was follow up and subsequent testing of 199 members of the severely effected subgroup of smokers and non-smokers, many of whom had stopped smoking in the interval between tests. Effects of smoking and stopping smoking on symptoms and plethsymographic results were assessed.
RESULTS---Symptoms and measured abnormal vascular responses related to cold were more severe in smokers than in non-smokers. Follow up of 199 severely effected members of the cohort, all removed from exposure for 2 years, indicated that smokers were almost twice as likely to have more severe vasospasm (test finger/control finger systolic blood pressure% (FSBP%) <30) than were non-smokers (-32.2% v 17.4%). 53 Subjects who stopped smoking during the interval between tests improved, and were indistinguishable from non-smokers similarly exposed to vibration. Additional physiological benefits of stopping smoking were still apparent at further follow up examination, 1 year later. Improvements evident on plethysmography were not accompanied by improvements in symptoms, which were unaffected by smoking.
CONCLUSIONS---Smoking seems to delay physiological improvement in response to cold challenge in workers with VWF, after the end of exposure to vibration. Symptoms were less likely to improve over time than digital blood pressure, and were less affected by smoking.


Keywords: vibration white finger; cold challenge plethysmography; smoking; Raynaud's phenomenon


© 2000 by Occupational and Environmental Medicine

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