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    Ann Intern Med. 1987 Nov;107(5):680-2.

    Increased neutrophil elastase activity in cigarette smokers.

    Weitz JI, Crowley KA, Landman SL, Lipman BI, Yu J.

    Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

    We compared plasma levels of the neutrophil elastase-derived fibrinopeptide A-alpha-1-21 in healthy cigarette smokers with those in nonsmokers. The mean A-alpha-1-21 concentration was fivefold higher (95% confidence interval [CI], 3.0 to 9.6) in ten cigarette smokers than in 20 healthy nonsmokers (2.0 nmol/L compared with 0.4 nmol/L; p less than 0.0001). To evaluate the acute effect of smoking on enzyme activity, a second group of ten smokers was studied. After refraining from smoking for 12 hours, each person smoked three cigarettes. The mean A-alpha-1-21 level in the second group of smokers was not different from that in the first group of smokers (1.8 nmol/L compared with 2.0 nmol/L) but was fivefold higher (95% CI, 2.6 to 8.7) than that in the nonsmokers (1.8 nmol/L compared with 0.4 nmol/L; p less than 0.0001). After smoking three cigarettes, subjects had a twofold elevation (95% CI, 1.6 to 3.5) in the mean A-alpha-1-21 concentration (from 1.8 nmol/L to 4.1 nmol/L; p = 0.002). Our data show that cigarette smoking perturbs the in-vivo elastase-antielastase balance and thus may produce lung disease through this mechanism.

    PMID: 3499108 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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