Recovery of bronchial epithelium on stopping smoking

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Abstract

Bronchial biopsy specimens were studied from 19 patients, comprising five non-smokers, eight current smokers, and six people who had given up smoking between two and 16 years previously. By using a recently developed morphometric technique the structural state of the bronchial epithelium was assessed and described by a score, which specifies the extent to which the epithelial histology departs from the normal, through the changes of mucous-cell hyperplasia and squamous-cell metaplasia. The epithelium was nearer normal in former smokers than current smokers in each of six pairs matched for smoking history. The numerical scale permitted statistical analysis with a precision that is not possible with data based on subjective diagnosis alone: the results of comparing histology with pack-years of cigarette consumption were consistent with the hypothesis that structural recovery occurs in bronchial epithelium in people who stop smoking for over two years. © 1981, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

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Bertram, J. F., & Rogers, A. W. (1981). Recovery of bronchial epithelium on stopping smoking. British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Ed.), 283(6306), 1567–1569. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.283.6306.1567

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