Smoking - Cause and Effect

Smoking - Cause and Effect
You may have noticed that you're not allowed to smoke in public places, no matter where you live. Indeed, local or city your government probably passed a public smoking ban. Of course, this raised the IRE of smokers, but for the non-smoker is like a breath of fresh air. Many people feel the need and I believe it is their right to be in public places without having to inhale the dangerous smoke.

Just as there are supporters of the ban have supporters against it. Smokers have a right to light up when they feel like. Non smokers have the right to breathe clean air.


Just why is smoking so controversial? Why the ban was needed to begin with? A small study of the causes of smoking and why it is dangerous, could shed light on the subject.


Dangers of smoking

Smoking is dangerous for a number of reasons. People who smoke contract heart disease, stroke, lung disease, impotence, etc. Why does smoking cause all these ailments? And why do people get hooked so easily? The reason is what the cigarette is made of.


The leaves of tobacco plants are picked, dried, chopped up and rolled into paper tubes. The tubes are then stuck into the mouth, teeth, and poison laden smoke taken into the lungs. Each time a person smokes a cigarette, takes an average of five minutes off his / her life. It is about the same time it takes to smoke the cigarette. Cigarette smoking causes hundreds of deaths each year.


The main chemical that causes the tobacco habit is a highly addictive substance called nicotine. Nicotine will behave as a stimulant, depressant or sedative. That is what causes smokers to get into the habit of smoking. Tobacco is one of the most physiologically damaging substances used by man.


Columbus and other early explorers who followed him were amazed to meet Indians who carried rolls of dried leaves that they set on fire. Then "drank" the smoke as it emerged from the rolls in the fire. Other Indians who pipes, where they burned the same leaves and "drank" the smoke.


Therefore, when sailors returned home they carried abundant supplies of tobacco and seeds with them. They also conducted leaves and seeds with them on their subsequent expeditions to other parts of the world. Within a few decades, the plant had been effectively scattered around the world. Settlers in America learned to smoke and smoke spread through England like wildfire. Demand often exceeds supply and prices rose accordingly.


From those days until today, it is important to note that no country that has learned to use tobacco have abandoned this practice. Even today, there has been no substantive able to replace tobacco.


Through the centuries since Columbus, have countless millions of smokers have tried to stop smoking. Some have succeeded, many others failed. Among the frequently observed consequences of termination is compulsive overeating, social discomfort, and depersonalization. Common first effects hungers for food, sweating, tremors, and nervousness. The nicotine in tobacco that produces this urge.


It is not definitely known why, but it is likely that nicotine affects the parts of the brain called pleasure centers. These are very small areas that are active in pleasurable sensations. Smokers seem to give himself the pleasure of taking nicotine into the body where it has gone into the brain's pleasure center.


Unfortunately, the feeling of pleasure is very short lived. After smoking, half of nicotine taken in place in half an hour. As the nicotine level drops, the smoker begins to feel worse, and a new craving for nicotine has been initiated. The body also develops a tolerance to nicotine. This requires more of it to reach the same level of satisfaction or pleasure. Thus begins the vicious circle of needs and desires known as addiction.


Today there are several ways to stop smoking, while slowly reducing the need or urge for nicotine. Doctor's can now prescribe patches, gums, and a number of alternative therapies to slowly reduce the dependence on nicotine. It is still not an easy road, but holds great potential for many.


Reasons for smoking

There are many diseases associated with smoking, lung cancer is number one. Lung cancer is very common. More than 300,000 people will be diagnosed with lung cancer this year. It is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the U.S.. It develops most often in scarred or chronically sick lungs. Over 87% of cases of lung cancer attributable to cigarette smoking. Other factors include exposure to asbestos, coal products, iron oxide, ionizing radiation, mustard gas, oil and vinyl.


Lung cancer occurs when cells in the lungs begin to grow rapidly in an uncontrolled manner. Lung cancer can start anywhere in the lungs and affect all parts of the respiratory system.

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