The relationship between passive smoking and the onset of Legg-Calvè-Perthes disease is still controversial. Therefore, we conducted the study to systematically evaluate and analyze the relationship. A comprehensive search was conducted. Meta-analysis was performed with RevMan 5.3 software, with the odds ratio as the effect size. Eight English articles with a total of 1379 Legg-Calvè-Perthes disease patients were eventually included. Passive smoking type of family members smoking in indoor (odds ratio = 2.53), paternal smoking (odds ratio = 2.76), maternal smoking (odds ratio = 2.02), maternal smoking during pregnancy (odds ratio = 1.68), using stove indoor (odds ratio = 2.56) are statistically significant (P < 0.05). For the family members smoking indoor, region may be a confounding factor (European group I = 92%, odds ratio = 2.51; USA group I = 5%, odds ratio = 3.26; and Asian group I = 0%, odds ratio = 2.25). In addition, the type of maternal smoking (odds ratio = 0.80, for 1-10 per day; odds ratio = 2.73, for 10-20 per day; odds ratio = 2.78, for >20 per day) and the type of maternal smoking during pregnancy (odds ratio = 1.36, for 1-9 per day; odds ratio = 2.02, for ≥10 per day) may show a dose-effect relationship. Passive smoking is a risk factor for the onset of Legg-Calvè-Perthes disease, but the specific types of passive smoking (haze, etc.), dose, dose-effect relationship, regional confounding, pathological mechanisms, etc. also require clinicians and researchers to continue exploring.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/BPB.0000000000000725 | DOI Listing |
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