How does smoking cause cancer?
Cigarette smoke is packed full of roughly 4000 compounds, many of which are toxic and can cause damage to our cells. Some are carcinogenic (cancer-causing). The three main ingredients of cigarette smoke are:
- Nicotine
- Carbon monoxide
- Tar
Carbon monoxide is a tasteless, odourless poisonous gas. It is taken up by the bloodstream quickly and impairs the smoker's breathing. The gas is also emitted by car exhausts, faulty boilers and fires and is very dangerous in badly ventilated spaces. Inhaling too much carbon monoxide causes coma and death by asphyxiation.
Tar is a substance made up of various chemicals, many of which are known to cause cancer. Around 70 per cent of the tar in cigarettes is deposited in the smoker's lungs.
Other harmful chemicals in cigarette smoke include
- ACETONE, more commonly used in nail polish remover
- AMMONIA, used in the dry cleaning industry
- ARSENIC, a deadly poison used in pest control and insecticides
- BENZENE, a cancer-causing agent used in the production of fuel and chemicals
- CADMIUM, a very poisonous chemical that can cause liver, kidney and brain damage, used in batteries
- FORMALDEHYDE, a known carcinogen used to preserve dead bodies
Smoking doesn't just harm the smoker. It can also cause disease and death among people exposed to the smoke. Passive smoking is thought to cause several hundred deaths from lung cancer every year in the UK. Passive smoking is particularly harmful to babies and children whose parents smoke in the home. Passive smoking may also cause miscarriage, premature birth, low birth weight, stillbirth, cot death, 'glue' ear, asthma and other respiratory problems.
What are the risks?
Tobacco smoking has no safe level of use. It is the only consumer product that kills a high proportion of those who use it in the way intended by the manufacturers. Overall, one in two smokers (smoking 20 per day from age 18) will die from their habit, half of them in middle age.
The risk of getting lung cancer from smoking :
- is directly related to the number of cigarettes smoked. The higher the consumption, the higher the risk.
- is highly dependent on how long a person has smoked. So smoking 1 packet a day for 40 years is much more hazardous than smoking 2 packets a day for 20 years.
- is drastically reduced by quitting. Smokers who stop before the age of 35 have a life expectancy not significantly different from non-smokers. Even stopping in middle age has great benefits.
- is halved by staying off cigarettes for ten years. The longer you don't smoke, the more you lower your risk.
It is never too late to quit smoking, although the sooner you quit the greater the long-term benefits for your health. There are also instant benefits to be had from giving up smoking, like improvements in your breathing. Also, your sense of smell and taste will improve and skin problems may clear up.
The physical craving for a cigarette can disappear as soon as one week after giving up. But the psychological cravings may last for much longer.
(Source from www.medicalnewstoday.com)
No comments:
Post a Comment