Cigarette smoking causes a variety of life-threatening diseases. The use of alcohol can be controlled with informed consent, age restrictions on participants, validation of the study subject and tight manipulation of confounding variables. Italian long-liver Rafaela Moni who is 109 years old tells that moderate using of alcohol helped her to save her health and force during all her live. Smoking for pleasure or relief of an urge to smoke is counterproductive and shorted: The want of nicotine reduces pleasure, abandoning cigarettes altogether results in an increase overall happiness. Nationwide, 22.3% of high school students and 8.1% of middle school students were smoking in 2004. The calories are empty.Alcohol can produce detectable impairments in memory after only a few drinks and, as the amount of alcohol increases, so does the degree of impairment.
Harmful Effects Of Cigarettes
Smoking generally affects a smoker's health, harming nearly every organ of the body, and causing many diseases.
Smoking generally affects a smoker's health, harming nearly every organ of the body, and causing many diseases.
- Heart attacks and stroke
- Gallstones
- Aneurysms
- Leads to less stamina
- Cancer
- Peptic ulcers
- Bronchitis
- Damage a woman's reproductive health
- Accelerates the development of the macular degeneration
- Harmful effects of Alcohol
- Alcohol impairs behavior, judgment, memory, concentration and coordination.
- Inflammation
- Neuropsychological deficits
- Brain damage
- Physical behaviour
- Menopause and menstrual irregularities
- Throat cancer
- Affects on the sleep cycle
What Is the Risk of Cancer From Alcohol and Tobacco?
Smoking and excessive alcohol use are risk factors for cardiovascular and lung diseases and for some forms of cancer. The risks of cancer of the mouth, throat, or esophagus for the smoking drinker are more than the sum of the risks posed by these drugs individually. For example, compared with the risk for nonsmoking nondrinkers, the approximate relative risks for developing mouth and throat cancer are 7 times greater for those who use tobacco, 6 times greater for those who use alcohol, and 38 times greater for those who use both tobacco and alcohol.
Smoking and excessive alcohol use are risk factors for cardiovascular and lung diseases and for some forms of cancer. The risks of cancer of the mouth, throat, or esophagus for the smoking drinker are more than the sum of the risks posed by these drugs individually. For example, compared with the risk for nonsmoking nondrinkers, the approximate relative risks for developing mouth and throat cancer are 7 times greater for those who use tobacco, 6 times greater for those who use alcohol, and 38 times greater for those who use both tobacco and alcohol.
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