Cigars Smoking

September 15, 2011

A sleeve of pearl-white smoke rolls from Theresa Strachila’s mouth as the bartender brings over a jug of ice water. In the dim light, a group of students sinks into leather couches and wingback chairs, lit cigars between their fingers. Tiny stacks of tapped ash fill the oversized ashtrays like ruins. Outside, car lights cut across the plate-glass windows fronting Boston’s North Street.

“There’s a mystique about the club,” says Strachila (CAS’12). “I get emails all the time saying, ‘I don’t know if you’re an exclusive club, but can I please join?’ Or, ‘I don’t smoke cigars very well, but here are my qualifications.’ I’m like, no, please come, there aren’t any applications.” Read the rest of this entry »

Smoking is one of the most imposing situations in the United States. There are unwavering claims over the impacts smoking has on folks. Smoking is the most imposing spearheading explanation for expiration in the US; it creates a considerable number of unexpected sorts of maladies and state of being situations. In school dormitories we are all living in a little space where contrasting folks have special inclination. This advances to the concern of actually what amount of impact does smoking smokes have on blanket state of being. Read the rest of this entry »

Cigarette smoke contains over 1000 different compounds including carbon monoxide, hydrogen cyanide, carcinogens and trace elements such as lead, nickel and cadium. The two main compounds suspected of causing the harmful effects on the developing fetus during pregnancy are carbon monoxide and nicotine. Carbon monoxide has a higher affinity for hemoglobin than oxygen, quickly forming the compound carboxyhemoglobin which is unable to carry oxygen. The formation of this molecule leads to a potential for decreased oxygen delivery to the fetus and fetal hypoxia.

Read the rest of this entry »

Why is Smoking a Problem?

August 28, 2011

Cigarette smoking, the chief avoidable cause of premature death in this country, is responsible for more than 300,000 premature deaths each year. (Letter from Otis Bowen, Secretary of Health and Human Services, to President George Bush, May 3, 1988)

Smoking is an avoidable cause of death. The way to avoid it? Quit smoking. But people can’t quit because it’s too hard — because smoking is addictive. In 1988 the Surgeon General issued a report entitled Nicotine Addiction. Throughout its 600+ pages he gives a highly detailed explanation of just why nicotine is addictive. Read the rest of this entry »

20 minutes after quitting: Your heart rate and blood pressure drops.

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(Effect of Smoking on Arterial Stiffness and Pulse Pressure Amplification, Mahmud, A, Feely, J. 2003. Hypertension:forty-one:183.)

12 hours after quitting: The carbon monoxide level within your blood drops to normal.

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(US Surgeon General’s Report, 1988, p. 202)

2 weeks to three months after quitting: Your circulation improves and your lung operate increases.

pulmonary

(US Surgeon General’s Report, 1990, pp.193, 194,196, 285, 323)

1 to nine months once quitting: Coughing plus shortness of breath decrease; cilia (little hair-prefer structures that move mucus out of the lungs) regain traditional perform during the lungs, increasing the facility to handle mucus, clean the lungs, and cut back the danger of infection.

cough

(US Surgeon General’s Report, 1990, pp. 285-287, 304)

One year once quitting: The surplus risk of coronary heart disease is 0.5 that of a smoker’s.

(US Surgeon General’s Report, 1990, p. vi)

5 years after quitting: Your stroke risk is reduced to that of a non-smoker 5 to 15 years after quitting.

(US Surgeon General’s Report, 1990, p. vi)

10 years after quitting: The lung cancer death rate is regarding 0.5 that of a unbroken smoker’s. The risk of cancer of the mouth, throat, esophagus, bladder, cervix, plus pancreas decrease, too.

(US Surgeon General’s Report, 1990, pp. vi, 131, 148, 152, one hundred fifty-five, 164,166)

fifteen years after quitting: The chance of coronary heart disease is the legal same as a non-smoker’s.

(US Surgeon General’s Report, 1990, p. vi)

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