#spacing July 2012 ~ Men's Health Medicine

Sunday, July 22, 2012

The Effects Of Smoking On Your Brain

Smoking Cigarettes > The Effects Of Smoking On Your Brain


100 Questions &
Answers About How
To Quit Smoking
When you talk about smoking, your lungs would be the centre of attention.

People would talk about the effect of smoking on your lungs.

Do you know that there is another organ in your body that is equally vulnerable to smoking damage?

That organ is your brain. Smoking can harm your brain and reduces your cognitive abilities and memory.
Your brain

Your brain is the center for consciousness, makes thinking and feeling possible, controls the voluntary movements and regulates digestion and breathing.

And your brain also controls both the conscious thoughts as well as the unconscious body processes.

How smoking affect your brain?

Below are some effects of smoking has on your brain,

Smoking leads to brain injuries…

Brain injury happens when there is a breakdown of barrier between the brain and blood vessels.

Long term smokers develop problems with motor function, actions like walking or talking will be affected.

They will experience fidgety hands and stuttering speech after having smoked a few cigarettes in a short span of time.

Smoking blocks your carotid arteries, cutting of blood supply to your brain cells resulting in a stroke called cerebral thrombosis.

Smoking causes the thickening and clotting of your blood and also causes oxidative stress.

Stroke

Nicotine from the cigarette you smoke enters your blood and makes your blood thicker.

Prolong smoking increases plague deposits on the inside wall of your arteries causes blockage to your arteries and at the same time harden it.

Your arteries lose its elasticity as well as blockage due to excess of plague deposit, resulting in a stroke.

Your brain relies on these arteries to the supply of oxygenated blood from your heart.

Reduced IQ and concentration

When smoke, you would have realized that your capacity to work with analytical problems reduces as time goes by.

This reduction in mental capacity is attributed to the reduction of oxygen supplied to your brain and increased carbon mono-oxide in the hemoglobin.

The reduced oxygen supply to the brain also causes fatigue. You will always feel tired.

You would feel restless and tired due to contaminated and low oxygenated blood passing through the brain.

Neuroinflamation

Smoking can lead to neuroinflamation and can further lead to complications like multiple sclerosis.

Neuroinflamation is caused by the presence of a compound known as NNK which is commonly found in all tobacco products.

This NNK compound is a pro-carcinogen, it becomes carcinogenic after it goes through your body metabolic processes.

It works on provoking the WBCs to attack other healthy cells, and this can lead to significant neurological damage.

Unlike drug or alcohol dependency, NNK does not have any direct effect on the brain cells but it can lead to neuroinflamation.

To summarized

Nicotine gets into your brain after about 10-15 seconds of the smoke you inhaled and it is active for the next 20-30 minutes.

Once it gets into your brain it change and controls your brain's receptor cells.

This will affects your brain chemistry and have an impact on your mood.

You will notice specific effects such as anxiety, irritability and mood swings, noticeable in the early days when you quit smoking.

Smoking is known to block your carotid artery, restricting the supply of blood to your brain cells.

When these conditions worsen, it can lead to a stroke (cerebral thrombosis).

Do note that smokers have an increased risk of suffering from a stroke when compared to non-smokers.

Continuous smoking leads to oxidative stress, and can also cause your blood to thicken and clot.

Long-term smoking has harmful effects on your memory, problem-solving and IQ.

In fact, smoking diminishes the thinking ability of a person.

The benefits of quitting smoking are not just physical but psychological as well.


Posted by: Mo Salle



Read Related Articles:

• The Danger Of Secondhand Smoke

• Stop Teens Smoking: What Could Work And What Could Not

• Some More Reasons For You To Stop Smoking

• Dangers of Smoking Cigarettes

• Can Smoking Cigarette Kill Me?

• 12 Health Risks Of Cigarettes

• 3 Ways How Smoking Affect Your Sleep



Books You Can Buy And Read:


Golden Holocaust: Origins Of The Cigarette Catastrophe And The Case Of Abolition

The Health Benefits Of Tobacco: A Smoker's Paradox

97 Mistakes People Unwittingly Make When Trying To Stop Smoking



Sunday, July 1, 2012

The Danger Of Secondhand Smoke

Smoking Cigarettes > The Danger Of Secondhand Smoke


100 Questions &
Answers About How
To Quit Smoking
Secondhand smoke is the smoke from the burning end of the cigarette and the smoke breathed out by the smokers next to or somewhere near you.

When you inhale secondhand smoke, it is the same as you are smoking cigarette yourself.

Secondhand smoke is dangerous to you regardless of your age or health, it is known as environmental tobacco smoke.

Secondhand smoke is a combination of 2 forms of smoke coming out from burning cigarette tobacco:

1. Sidestream smoke

The smoke that comes from the end of a lighted cigarette.

2. Mainstream smoke

The smoke that is exhaled by a smoker

You think that both forms are the same but they are not.

Sidestream smokes contain high level of cancer-causing agents (carcinogens) than mainstream smoke.

And it also contains smaller particles than mainstream smoke which make it easier to travel into your body cells.

Involuntary smoking or passive smoking is a term associated with non smokers who are exposed to secondhand smoke.

They breathe in nicotine and other toxic chemicals just like smokers do.

The more often you are exposed to secondhand smoke the higher the level of these harmful chemicals enters your body.

Secondhand smoke is dangerous Secondhand smoke is classified as known human carcinogen a cancer causing agent by the US National Toxicology Program, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) a branch of the World Health Organization.

Smoke from tobacco contains more than 7,000 chemical compounds.

250 or more of these chemicals are known to be harmful and at least 69 of them are known to cause cancer.

There are may ways secondhand smoke can caused you harm.

Below are some of the diseases you may suffer when you inhale secondhand smoke,

* Heart disease

* Lung cancer

* Asthma

* Respiratory and lung infection

Since 1964, US Surgeon General published publicly 30 separate reports on the health issues linked to tobacco and secondhand smoke.

Ongoing research in these reports continues to support the fact that SHS are linked to serious health problems that can be prevented.

The reports have highlighted that,

* Chemicals in tobacco smoke damage sperm and reduce fertility and harmful to fetal development.

* SHS immediately affects your heart, your blood vessels and your blood circulation, over the years it can cause heart disease, strokes and heart attacks.

* SHS causes lung cancer even though you are a non smoker. Brief exposure can damage cells that set the cancer process in motion.

Any exposure to SHS is harmful as there is no such thing as a safe level of exposure.

The only way to fully protect you as a non-smoker from exposure to SHS outdoors is to stay away from people who smoke, do not comes near to designated smoking areas, smoky pubs and etc.

People who are regularly exposed to secondhand smoke have increased risks of dying from strokes and emphysema as well as from heart disease and lung cancer, according to nearly two decades of study conducted by researchers from Chinese PLA General Hospital in Beijing.

Joanna Cohen, director of the Institute for Global Tobacco Control at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health said, the results from China support the evidence that secondhand smoke may boost your risks of heart disease and certain cancers but also strokes and emphysema as well.

She added that this type of study is important for adding to evidence of a causal relationship.

Avoiding secondhand smokes completely is very difficult.

You breathe in secondhand smoke everywhere you go, in restaurants, around the doorways of buildings, at work and even your home.

Be aware of your surroundings.

Protect yourself.

Try not to breathe in secondhand smoke where ever and whenever possible.


Article Resource: Reuters

Posted by: Mo Salle



Read Related Articles:

• The Effects Of Smoking On Your Brain

• Stop Teens Smoking: What Could Work And What Could Not

• Some More Reasons For You To Stop Smoking

• Dangers of Smoking Cigarettes

• Can Smoking Cigarette Kill Me?

• 12 Health Risks Of Cigarettes

• Smoking Ban

• 3 Ways How Smoking Affect Your Sleep



Books You Can Buy And Read:


Smoke Filled Room: A Postmortem On The Tobacco Deal (Studies In Law And Economics)

Stop Smoking Now: Learn How To Quit Smoking And Beat Cigarettes Once And For All And Get Your Health, Your Wealth And Your Life

Regulating Tobacco




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