Artigo Revisado por pares

Effect of Nicotine on the Rate and Strength of Long Bone Fracture Healing

1998; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 353; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1097/00003086-199808000-00027

ISSN

1528-1132

Autores

Steven M. Raikin, Jonathan C. Landsman, Vladimir A. Alexander, Mark I. Froimson, Nicholas A. Plaxton,

Tópico(s)

Bone health and osteoporosis research

Resumo

Empirical clinical observation suggests that cigarette smoking had an inhibitory effect on long bone fracture healing, but this has not been proven scientifically. Forty female New Zealand White rabbits had midshaft tibial osteotomies performed and plated. These were divided randomly into two groups receiving either systemic nicotine or saline (placebo). Lateral radiographs were taken at 4, 6, and 8 weeks that showed a 17.2% average difference in callus formation between the two groups and a significant lag in formation of cortical continuity in the nicotine group. The rabbits were sacrificed 8 weeks after fracture, and healing was compared biomechanically. Three (13%) fractures showed no clinical evidence of union in the nicotine group, whereas all fractures in the control group healed. Biomechanical testing showed the nicotine exposed bones to be 26% weaker in three-point bending than were those exposed to placebo.

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