Wednesday 9 March 2016

What smoking does to you - 10 Reasons to give up this National No Smoking Day

Smoking affects the whole body from your head to your toes.  We all know about lung cancer, but what else can smoking lead to in your body? 

Head
 
Dull, foul smelling hair, hair loss, loss of hearing, glue ear, eye irritation, cataracts, blindness, loss of sense of smell.
 
Brain
 
Narrowed arteries supplying the brain with oxygen-rich blood means an increased risk of stroke, resulting in possible paralysis and loss of speech. Reduced supply of oxygen to the brain can also result in headaches, mood changes and panic attacks.
 
Mouth and Throat
 
Gum disease and tooth loss, tobacco- stained teeth, foul-smelling breath, diminished sense of taste, plaque and gum disease, sore throat, cancer of lips, tongue, throat, larynx, oesophagus.
 
 
 
Lungs
 
Bronchitis, emphysema, pneumonia, coughs and colds, wheezing, shortness of breath, asthma, tar deposits, damaged cilia, pleurisy, cancer.

25-a-day smokers are 25 times more likely to die from lung cancer than non-smokers. Four out of five of lung cancer deaths are attributed to smoking.
 
Heart
 
Narrowed arteries, thickened blood, aortic aneurysm, angina and heart attack. Smokers are more than twice as likely to die from coronary heart disease as non-smokers
 
Circulation
 
Smoking damages the blood vessels in the legs and arms, aiding the atherosclerosis process. This is the narrowing and hardening of arteries which can lead to peripheral vascular disease, gangrene of limbs, cold hands and feet, cold skin, decreased fitness and sometimes even amputation of the limbs.

The majority of people with peripheral vascular disease, which can result in one or both legs being amputated, are smokers.
 
Skin
 
Slow healing skin wounds, premature ageing and wrinkling, reduced oxygen supply to skin resulting in a grey, parched appearance, cellulite resulting from excess toxins in body, tobacco-stained fingers.
 
Bones
 
Female smokers are more likely than non-smokers to suffer from osteoporosis (loss of bony tissue resulting in brittle bones that are liable to fracture) before reaching the menopause.
 
Stomach
 
Stomach ulcers, cancers of stomach, kidneys, pancreas and the bladder.
 
Reproduction system and fertility
 
Impotence, deformed sperm, reduced sperm count and mobility, testicular cancer, reduced fertility, miscarriage, low birthweight baby, cancer of cervix, cot death.

Smoking increases the risk of impotence for men in their 30s and 40s. Smoking also increases the risk of miscarriage, low birthweight and other complications. Low birthweight babies are more likely to require life support.


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