KissMeGoodnight
Beauty Guide: Anti-Aging
Secrets To Looking Young,
Feeling Young and Being Young
(
17 page online guide )
Anti-Aging:
The Effects Of Pollution & Smoking
Are you under
the assumption that pollution is a modern day problem? Think
again. In ancient times, the Greeks AND the Romans spewed
huge amounts of toxins into the air extracting silver from
lead.
The stench of
an abandoned canal in Washington, D.C. clogged with animal
carcasses and human waste was so bad it permeated the White
House.
More than 70,000
chemical compounds were developed during the second half
of the twentieth century. Many are credited with causing
cancer in laboratory animals.
So, does this
affect the risk of developing cancer, heart disease or stroke
beyond age 60? You better believe it does and while there
are varied opinions, there are researchers who believe that
as much as 25% of all cancers could be prevented if Americans
reduces exposure to smog, pesticides, second hand
smoke and other hazards that we breathe, drink, eat and absorb into
our bodies. While there are many factors that cause cancer,
heart disease and stroke that we have no control over such
as heredity, our environment is something we can do something
about.
It’s a killer
– If you are a typical male smoker in your sixties or seventies,
you began smoking at age 17 and have smoked about 27 cigarettes
a day for 51 years. If you are a woman in the same range,
you began smoking at around 24 and have been smoking 20 cigarettes
a day for 45 years. And you have probably tried at least
once or twice to quit like 80% of people who smoke.
Is it too late
to quit? Absolutely not. Putting out that last cigarette
as late as 60 to 80 can halt many of the worst effects of
smoking. Yet 46% of older smokers don’t believe that smoking
is that harmful or that quitting at this stage in their life
is worthwhile. If you fall into that category consider this:
- Within eight
hours of quitting, your pulse rate and blood pressure drop
and oxygen levels in your body will rise.
- Within 24 hours
of quitting, your risk of a heart attack decreases.
- After one month,
your circulation improves, your energy levels surge and
your lung function expands by up to 30%.
- After one year,
your risk of heart disease is half that of someone who
continues to smoke.
- After five
years, your risk of having a stroke begins to decline .
- After 10 years,
your chances of developing lung cancer are the same as
that of someone who has never smoked.
Each
time you take a puff you inhale more than 4,700 chemicals
that have been shown to have effect throughout your body.
Some of the milder effects are accelerated wrinkling of the
skin, yellowing of the teeth and fingers and slower healing
of wounds.
Here
is a list of a few of those chemicals and what their common
uses are:
Acetone
paint stripper
Ammonia floor cleaner
Arsenic ant poison
Butane lighter fluid
Cadmium car batteries
Carbon monoxide car exhaust
Formaldehyde morgue preservative
Methanol anti-freeze
Naphthalene mothballs
Nicotine insecticide
Polonium 210 radioactive substance
Then along come
the really dangerous effects of smoking including increasing
the risk of disabilities like osteoporosis, hip fractures,
cataracts, diabetes, tooth loss, and emphysema.
Smoking causes
fatal complications. Every year, more than 400,000 Americans
die of smoking related causes. That adds up to more than
1,000 a day making this the most preventable cause of death
in the United States. 50% of those deaths are caused by cardiovascular
disease and 30% by lung cancer.
Smoking hurts
your heart. If you quit your risk of a heart attack is reduced
by 50% in one year.
Smoking tops the
list of cancer risks. If you quit even at age 65, your risk
of developing lung cancer by age 75 is less than half of
someone who continues to smoke.
Smoking is an
addiction plain and simple. Don’t blame yourself if you have
tried several times to quit and failed. The prime ingredient
in tobacco is Nicotine and is one of the most addictive drugs
known to mankind. Is it hopeless? No. Many people have quit
and so can you.
This is not a
guide about smoking cessation, but here are a few tips to
help you.
Set a quit date
and stick to it. Experts report that those who set a definite
date are more likely to stick with it. Avoid stressful times
like holidays and don’t pick a date that is months away.
Quit cold
turkey. If you do it this way, you will probably
have a week to 10 days of withdrawal but then you’ll be
almost over the hump.
Throw them away.
On the date you quit, throw away all tobacco products. Every
hidden cigarette should be ferreted out and disposed of.
Get rid of lighters, matches and ashtrays as well.
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