Smoking
Smoking is a matter of personal choice. However, the link between smoking and lung cancer seems clear. If you are going to smoke, you should know what is happening in your body.
- Each time you inhale tobacco smoke you kill several hundred lung cells.
- You send carbon monoxide into the blood where it competes with oxygen for hemoglobin (and usually wins).
- You paralyze the bronchial cilia (hairs that catch things) and make it hard for them to keep bacteria from the lungs.
- You speed up your heart rate.
- You dull your brain with carbon monoxide, thereby slowing your reaction time and visual acuity.
- Nicotine hits the central nervous system and stimulates it to release hormones. A feeling of depression and fatigue follows the nicotine "rush."
- Other components of cigarette smoke cause the arteries to contract, causing a decrease in blood supply to the fingers and toes and a drop in skin temperature.