Cigarette smoking
 Cigarette Smoking 
 Cigarette smoking is addictive; it fulfills these 
  three criteria: 
- 
  
- 
Smokers develop a tolerance to nicotine (they need to smoke more and more for an effect).
 
- Smokers become dependent on it (they need it to feel comfortable). 
 
- Smokers suffer withdrawal symptoms (physical and psychological discomfort when they try to stop smoking).
 
 
- There are hundreds of chemical substances in cigarette smoke. Three of the most damaging are:
 
- Tars--damage delicate lung tissue and are 
  considered the main cancer- causing agent in cigarette smoke.
 
- Nicotine--a poison found only in tobacco leaves. It 
  can be extracted as a colorless, oily transparent liquid and used in solution 
  as an insecticide. One drop of pure nicotine can be fatal to humans.
 (1) It is a powerful stimulant to the brain and central nervous 
system that 'hits'' the brain within four seconds. Like the drug, 
alcohol, after it initially stimulates, it has a depressant effect.
 (2) Nicotine constricts (narrows) the blood vessels, cutting down the
 flow of blood and oxygen throughout your body. Your heart has to pump 
harder, thus increasing the chance of heart disease. It raises the blood
 pressure and also narrows bronchioles (air passageways) in the lungs, 
also depriving the body of some oxygen.
 
- Carbon monoxide--replaces needed oxygen in your red 
blood cells. Even after one stops smoking, carbon monoxide stays in the 
bloodstream for hours, depriving the body of oxygen until the oxygen 
level in your blood returns to normal. Carbon monoxide is a waste 
product of cigarette smoking and also of gasoline engines.
 
 
- Some of the diseases caused by cigarette smoking are:
 
- Chronic bronchitis (inflammation of the bronchi 
  which are the breathing tubes in the lungs) 
 
- Laryngitis (inflammation of the throat) 
 
- Emphysema(a degenerative lung disease that destroys 
  breathing capacity) 
 
- Smoking is a contributing factor in cancer of the lungs, mouth, and esophagus.
 
 
- Smoking cigarettes stains the teeth, reduces the 
  efficiency of the body's ability to taste and smell, and increases the process 
  of wrinkling of the skin (especially around the eyes). 
 
- The effects of some medication taken by a person may 
  be increased, decreased, or cancelled out by smoking. 
 
- Cigarette smoking by pregnant women may cause harm to 
  the fetus. 
 
- Cigarette smoke pollutes the air in enclosed places, 
  which also affects the nonsmokers present. 
 
- Smoke from an idle cigarette contains at least as much 
  tar and nicotine as inhaled smoke (American Lung Association).
 
- Chewing tobacco may lead to cancer of the mouth and to 
  an addiction because of the nicotine that is absorbed through the mouth's 
  lining. 
 
- It is generally accepted that "peer pressure" 
  encourages many young people between the ages of 10 and 18 to begin 
  experimenting with smoking (American Cancer Society). 
 
- When a person quits smoking, the body begins to repair 
  some of the damage caused by the cigarette smoking.
 
    
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