Smoking causes illness and death, among other
disadvantages. It is the most preventable lifestyle factor affecting
human health. Smoking harms every organ in your body. Your heart, blood
vessels, lungs and fertility are all negatively affected by smoking and
the chemicals in cigarettes.
Heart and Blood Vessel Health
Smoking changes the structure of blood
vessels. This can lead to the buildup of plaque that hardens and narrows
the vessels, causing a disease called atherosclerosis. Atherosclerosis
is a common cause of heart attacks and peripheral artery disease.
Smoking increases your likelihood of developing high blood pressure. The
carbon monoxide inhaled from cigarette smoke interferes with the way
oxygen is carried by your blood to organs, including the heart, which
links it to heart disease. Smoking also increases the incidence of blood
clots, which can lead to strokes.
Lung Function
The lung is the main target of the smoke
inhaled by cigarettes because it has direct contact with the chemicals.
Smoking is the most common cause of chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease, or COPD, which affects the function of the lungs and how they
deliver oxygen into the body. COPD includes chronic bronchitis and
emphysema and involves a change in the structure of your lung tissue and
airways. If you have asthma, smoking can increase the frequency and
severity of attacks. Smoking diminishes lung function, so you may
experience shortness of breath even with little or no exertion.
Effects on Fertility and Babies
Smoking contributes to infertility and
decreases the chance of conception whether you are a man or woman. Men
who smoke are found to have a reduced total sperm count in addition to a
decrease in the sperm's ability to fertilize an egg. Smoking diminishes
the capacity of an ovary to create eggs that are capable of healthy
fertilization. If you are pregnant and a smoker, you increase the risk
of a low-birth-weight or preterm baby. An estimated 20 to 30 percent of
low-birth-weight babies and 14 percent of preterm births are attributed
to smoking in pregnancy, according the U.S. Surgeon General’s report on
women and smoking. There is a higher chance your baby will have asthma
if you smoked during pregnancy. Even some full-term babies will have
diminished lung function if you smoked while pregnant.
Smoking Causes Cancer
An estimated 1 in 3 deaths from cancer are
attributed to smoking, notes the U.S. Surgeon General’s 2010 report on
the relationship between smoking and disease. The report points out that
smoking causes 87 percent of lung cancer deaths and is also responsible
for cancer in many other parts of the body. If you smoke, you are at
higher risk for cancers of the esophagus, throat, mouth, and stomach,
among others. In addition to the addictive ingredient of nicotine,
cigarettes contain about 600 ingredients. When burned, 4,000 chemicals
are created, approximately 50 of which are carcinogenic.
Disadvantages to Your Family
Smoking is the leading cause of preventable
death. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that an
estimated 443,000 Americans die every year from smoking-related
diseases, including those indirectly affected. Secondhand smoke is a
mixture of the smoke from the burning end of a cigarette or cigar and
what the smoker exhales. Even low levels of secondhand smoke are
harmful. Secondhand smoke contributes to the incidence of ear infections
and asthma attacks in children, increases the risk of sudden infant
death syndrome and can cause smoking-related diseases in people who have
never smoked. More than 3,400 lung cancer deaths every year in the U.S.
are attributed to secondhand smoke, according to the American Cancer
Society. Besides the negative health effects, smoking is expensive:
Smoking a pack of cigarettes each day costs more than $5,000 a year.
Even though many smoking-induced effects can be reversed after quitting,
some are permanent. The best way to avoid these risks is to not smoke
or to quit if you have started.
0 comments:
Post a Comment