AI Article Synopsis

  • Tobacco use negatively impacts overall health and can influence post-surgical outcomes, especially in urology, but the specifics are less clear.
  • A literature review was conducted combining research on the effects of tobacco on the body with surgical outcomes for tobacco users, focusing on human studies and large-scale analyses.
  • While smokers face higher risks of certain complications, especially respiratory ones, surgeries shouldn't be canceled solely due to tobacco use; instead, collaborative decision-making is encouraged between urologists and patients.

Article Abstract

Background And Objective: The overall negative impact of tobacco use on an individual's health has been well documented but the literature on tobacco's impact on post-surgical outcomes, specifically the outcomes after urologic surgery, is not as clear cut. The aim of this narrative review is to provide urologists with the information needed to have a nuanced pre-operative counseling conversation with patients about tobacco use. Here we combine publications on the histologic and physiologic changes induced by nicotine and tobacco use with publications from the wider surgical literature on post-operative outcomes in tobacco users.

Methods: A literature search of PubMed, Google Scholar and Medline was performed using iterations of the following terms: tobacco, nicotine, changes, physiologic, histology, post-operative, and surgical. Non-English publications and abstracts were excluded. Inclusion required agreement from all authors and preference was given to human specimens over animal models for the basic science manuscripts and large database and meta-analyses over single institution experiences.

Key Content And Findings: Tobacco use results in measurable changes in nearly every organ system in the body. While smokers have increased wound complications, there is no evidence that reconstructive surgery using grafts or flaps fail more frequently in tobacco users. Smokers have an increased risk of respiratory complications following endotracheal intubation.

Conclusions: Surgeries should not be canceled due to a patient's inability to cease tobacco use. Urologists and patients should engage in joint decision making regarding the timing and pursuit of elective operations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9906109PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/tau-22-427DOI Listing

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