This document discusses the health risks of smoking and secondhand smoke. It notes that smoking causes cancer, especially lung cancer, as well as other lung diseases like emphysema and bronchitis. Smoking is also linked to increased risk of cancer in other organs. Additionally, secondhand smoke exposes non-smokers to the same toxic chemicals and increases their risks of lung cancer, heart disease, and other illnesses. Children are especially vulnerable to the health effects of secondhand smoke.
Over one thousand million people worldwide smoke tobacco.
In developed countries, the overall percentage of smokers has decreased, but the percentage is still increasing in developing countries and among women.
More and more is known about the harmful effects of tobacco on smokers.
Are passive smokers also at risk?
Over one thousand million people worldwide smoke tobacco.
In developed countries, the overall percentage of smokers has decreased, but the percentage is still increasing in developing countries and among women.
More and more is known about the harmful effects of tobacco on smokers.
Are passive smokers also at risk?
Tobacco smoking: The direct inhalation of tobacco smoke, the basis of major health hazards. Long known to cause cancer in humans, tobacco smoking is generally held to be the leading preventable cause of cancer in developed countries. Tobacco smoking was formally classified as a "known human carcinogen" by the US government in 2000.
There are 2 primary gamers in the world of smoking associated lung illness: lung cancer cells and emphysema. The clinical neighborhood informs us that 90% of all lung cancers cells are created by smoking cigarettes.
This talk summarizes the potential mechanisms for vascular injury with smoking and the evidence for the CV risks in patients with both smoking and hypertension
DOI: 10.21276/ijlssr.2016.2.4.8
ABSTRACT- In India most of the peoples have the bad habit of smoking & it’s harmful effects on the body, it is the
major cause of the cancer of mouth, lungs, esophagus & stomach, pancreas and bladder. The smoking can also affect the
health to the next person who comes in a contact with the smoker that is also called as a passive smoking (second hand
smoke). Most of the Indian peoples have low knowledge about the harmful effects of smoking. The present investigation
study that the effects of smoking scores to 43.33%, 23.33%, 6.67% and 26.67% in Nashik District. The socio
demographic variables Age, Sex, Religion, Educational status, Occupation found to be significantly influencing
knowledge of the peoples. The finding of the study showed that majority of the adults were between 18-23 yrs = 43.33%,
an educational status pre university course and lived in joint families. Key-words- Smoking, Cancer, Effects of smoking, Street play
E-Cigarette
Although still awaiting FDA approval, electronic cigarettes, or e-cigarettes, are growing in popularity among those attempting to quit smoking. E-cigarettes give users a craving for nicotine and physical sensations. While allegedly reducing the amount of chemicals, and smoke regularly found in cigarettes. The side effects of e-cigarettes are not extreme; such as prescription NRTs nor are they acting as slow; as other nicotine replacements.
Tobacco smoking: The direct inhalation of tobacco smoke, the basis of major health hazards. Long known to cause cancer in humans, tobacco smoking is generally held to be the leading preventable cause of cancer in developed countries. Tobacco smoking was formally classified as a "known human carcinogen" by the US government in 2000.
There are 2 primary gamers in the world of smoking associated lung illness: lung cancer cells and emphysema. The clinical neighborhood informs us that 90% of all lung cancers cells are created by smoking cigarettes.
This talk summarizes the potential mechanisms for vascular injury with smoking and the evidence for the CV risks in patients with both smoking and hypertension
DOI: 10.21276/ijlssr.2016.2.4.8
ABSTRACT- In India most of the peoples have the bad habit of smoking & it’s harmful effects on the body, it is the
major cause of the cancer of mouth, lungs, esophagus & stomach, pancreas and bladder. The smoking can also affect the
health to the next person who comes in a contact with the smoker that is also called as a passive smoking (second hand
smoke). Most of the Indian peoples have low knowledge about the harmful effects of smoking. The present investigation
study that the effects of smoking scores to 43.33%, 23.33%, 6.67% and 26.67% in Nashik District. The socio
demographic variables Age, Sex, Religion, Educational status, Occupation found to be significantly influencing
knowledge of the peoples. The finding of the study showed that majority of the adults were between 18-23 yrs = 43.33%,
an educational status pre university course and lived in joint families. Key-words- Smoking, Cancer, Effects of smoking, Street play
E-Cigarette
Although still awaiting FDA approval, electronic cigarettes, or e-cigarettes, are growing in popularity among those attempting to quit smoking. E-cigarettes give users a craving for nicotine and physical sensations. While allegedly reducing the amount of chemicals, and smoke regularly found in cigarettes. The side effects of e-cigarettes are not extreme; such as prescription NRTs nor are they acting as slow; as other nicotine replacements.
Physiological effects of smoking on the respiratory system & all other system...martinshaji
HAPPY PHARMACIST DAY
smoking can damage all human body systems in a really bad manner ....this study explains all about these by system wise
please comment
thank you
1. DANGEROUS OF SMOKING
Almost everybody knows that smoking is bad for the health. Images of blackened lungs line
school hallways and hospital waiting rooms, but despite this people continue to take up
smoking. This may have to do with the pervasive romantic image of smoking -- an image
that has nothing in common with reality.
There are many ways to take tobacco. You can chew it, inhale it through the nose, and
smoke it in the form of cigars or cigarettes. No matter how it's taken it is dangerous, but
because smoking is the most popular way to consume tobacco it has also received the
greatest attention from the medical field and the media.
When a smoker inhales a puff of cigarette smoke the large surface area of the lungs allows
nicotine to pass into the blood stream almost immediately. It is this nicotine "hit" that
smokers crave, but there is a lot more to smoke than just nicotine. In fact, there are more
than 4000 chemical substances that make up cigarette smoke and many of them are toxic.
Cigarette smoke is composed of 43 carcinogenic substances and more than 400 other toxins
that can also be found in wood varnish, nail polish remover, and rat poison. All of these
substances accumulate in the body and can cause serious problems to the heart and lungs.
Cancer is the most common disease associated with smoking. Smoking is the cause of 90%
of lung cancer cases and is related to 30% of all cancer fatalities. Other smoking-related
cancers include cancers of the mouth, pancreas, urinary bladder, kidney, stomach,
esophagus, and larynx.
Besides cancer, smoking is also related to several other diseases of the lungs. Emphysema
and bronchitis can be fatal and 75% of all deaths from these diseases are linked to smoking.
Smokers have shorter lives than non-smokers. On average, smoking takes 15 years off your
life span. This can be explained by the high rate of exposure to toxic substances which are
found in cigarette smoke.
Smokers also put others at risk. The dangers of breathing in second-hand smoke are well
known. Smokers harm their loved ones by exposing them to the smoke they exhale. All sorts
of health problems are related to breathing in second-hand smoke. Children are especially
susceptible to the dangers of second-hand smoke because their internal organs are still
developing. Children exposed to second-hand smoke are more vulnerable to asthma,
sudden infant death syndrome, bronchitis, pneumonia, and ear infections.
Smoking can also be dangerous for unborn children. Mothers who smoke are more likely to
suffer from miscarriages, bleeding and nausea, and babies of smoking mothers have
reduced birth weights or may be premature. These babies are more susceptible to sudden
infant death syndrome and may also have lifelong health complications due to chest
infections and asthma.
It is never too late to give up smoking, even those who have smoked for 20 years or more
can realize tremendous health benefits from giving up the habit.
2. What is secondhand smoke?
Secondhand smoke (SHS) is also known as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). SHS is a mixture of
2 forms of smoke that come from burning tobacco:
Sidestream smoke – smoke from the lighted end of a cigarette, pipe, or cigar
Mainstream smoke – the smoke exhaled by a smoker
Even though we think of these as the same, they aren’t. Sidestream smoke has higher concentrations
of cancer-causing agents (carcinogens) than mainstream smoke. And, it has smaller particles than
mainstream smoke, which make their way into the lungs and the body’s cells more easily.
When non-smokers are exposed to SHS it is called involuntary smoking or passive smoking. Non-
smokers who breathe in SHS take in nicotine and toxic chemicals by the same route smokers do. The
more SHS you breathe, the higher the level of these harmful chemicals in your body.
Why is secondhand smoke a problem?
Secondhand smoke causes cancer
Secondhand smoke is classified as a “known human carcinogen” (cancer-causing agent) by the US
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the US National Toxicology Program, and the International
Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), a branch of the World Health Organization.
Tobacco smoke contains more than 7,000 chemical compounds. More than 250 of these chemicals
are known to be harmful, and at least 69 are known to cause cancer.
SHS has been linked to lung cancer. There is also some evidence suggesting it may be linked with
childhood leukemia and cancers of the larynx (voice box), pharynx (throat), brain, bladder, rectum,
stomach, and breast.
IARC reported in 2009 that parents who smoked before and during pregnancy were more likely to
have a child with hepatoblastoma. This rare cancer is thought to start while the child is still in the
uterus. Compared with non-smoking parents, the risk was about twice as high if only one parent
smoked, but nearly 5 times higher when both parents smoked.
3. Secondhand smoke and breast cancer
Whether SHS increases the risk of breast cancer is an issue that’s still being studied. Both
mainstream and SHS have about 20 chemicals that, in high concentrations, cause breast cancer in
rodents. And we know that in humans, chemicals from tobacco smoke reach breast tissue and are
found in breast milk.
One reason the link between SHS and breast cancer risk in human studies is uncertain is because
breast cancer risk has not been shown to be increased in active smokers. One possible explanation
for this is that tobacco smoke might have different effects on breast cancer risk in smokers and in
those who are exposed to SHS.
A report from the California Environmental Protection Agency in 2005 concluded that the evidence
regarding SHS and breast cancer is “consistent with a causal association” in younger women. This
means the SHS acts as if it could be a cause of breast cancer in these women. The 2006 US Surgeon
General’s report, The Health Consequences of Involuntary Exposure to Tobacco Smoke, sums it up
by saying that there is “suggestive but not sufficient” evidence of a link.
Research is still being done, but women should be told that this possible link to breast cancer is yet
another reason to avoid being around SHS.
Secondhand smoke causes other kinds of diseases and death
Secondhand smoke can cause harm in many ways. Each year in the United States alone, it is
responsible for:
An estimated 46,000 deaths from heart disease in people who are current non-smokers
About 3,400 lung cancer deaths in non-smoking adults
Worse asthma and asthma-related problems in up to 1 million asthmatic children
Between 150,000 and 300,000 lower respiratory tract infections (lung and bronchus) in children
under 18 months of age, with 7,500 to 15,000 hospitalizations each year
Children exposed to secondhand smoke are much more likely to be put into intensive care when
they have the flu, they are in the hospital longer, and are more likely to need breathing tubes than
kids who aren’t exposed to SHS
In the United States, the costs of extra medical care, illness, and death caused by SHS are over
$10 billion per year