Originally posted by: tm37
Raises blood pressure
Reduces oxygen
Originally posted by: Leper Messiah
nicotine is a stimulant, so it makes your heart run faster. heart runs faster, more wear and tear on heart = heart disease.
Originally posted by: compuwiz1
I'm 94 years old..what the hell do I care! 😉
Originally posted by: jadinolf
Originally posted by: compuwiz1
I'm 94 years old..what the hell do I care! 😉
Old geezer! 😉
Originally posted by: mdbound
Quick Google Search:
http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4545
http://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/bhcv...d_heart_disease_the_facts?OpenDocument
http://www.clevelandclinic.org/health/health-info/docs/0300/0384.asp
Basically, coronary artery disease (and cerbrovascular disease and peripheral artery disease) are all due to the same basic problem....inflammation of the vessel wall with subsequent development of cholesterol plaques. The single biggest risk factor is cigarette smoke exposure. Other factors are important too but less pathogenic (diabetes, age, high blood pressure, high cholesterol).
Smoking itself however has a lot of other deliterious effects that go beyond its cardiovascular effects. I could go on forever about this if anybody wanted to hear.
Oh, and regarding nicotine....was previously used to put down race horses that had broken their leg....shot straight into a vein would result in death in a few seconds. Safe and painless for the horse (supposedly).
MD.
Originally posted by: mdbound
Quick Google Search:
http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4545
http://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/bhcv...d_heart_disease_the_facts?OpenDocument
http://www.clevelandclinic.org/health/health-info/docs/0300/0384.asp
Basically, coronary artery disease (and cerbrovascular disease and peripheral artery disease) are all due to the same basic problem....inflammation of the vessel wall with subsequent development of cholesterol plaques. The single biggest risk factor is cigarette smoke exposure. Other factors are important too but less pathogenic (diabetes, age, high blood pressure, high cholesterol).
Yes, and you don't have to go beyond your local bingo hall to see that 😉Smoking itself however has a lot of other deliterious effects that go beyond its cardiovascular effects.
Oh, and regarding nicotine....was previously used to put down race horses that had broken their leg....shot straight into a vein would result in death in a few seconds. Safe and painless for the horse (supposedly).
MD.
Originally posted by: SMOGZINN
Originally posted by: mdbound
Quick Google Search:
http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4545
http://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/bhcv...d_heart_disease_the_facts?OpenDocument
http://www.clevelandclinic.org/health/health-info/docs/0300/0384.asp
Basically, coronary artery disease (and cerbrovascular disease and peripheral artery disease) are all due to the same basic problem....inflammation of the vessel wall with subsequent development of cholesterol plaques. The single biggest risk factor is cigarette smoke exposure. Other factors are important too but less pathogenic (diabetes, age, high blood pressure, high cholesterol).
But that says nothing about what about cigarette smoke causes this risk factor. It only tells us that people that smoke are more likely to have coronary artery disease. Perhaps there is a third hidden factor that actually causes both addictive smoking and coronary artery disease?
Please understand, I am not disputing the fact that smoking is bad, just the science that tries to double talk around a lack of evidence.
Yes, and you don't have to go beyond your local bingo hall to see that 😉Smoking itself however has a lot of other deliterious effects that go beyond its cardiovascular effects.
Oh, and regarding nicotine....was previously used to put down race horses that had broken their leg....shot straight into a vein would result in death in a few seconds. Safe and painless for the horse (supposedly).
MD.
This is spurious. At one time axes were used to cut off peoples heads, one axe could kill hundreds of people! Does this then mean that axes are bad, and we should not use them to cut down trees?
What?s the link between smoking and heart disease?
About 30% of all deaths from heart disease in the United States are directly related to cigarette smoking. Smoking is a major cause of coronary artery disease (atherosclerosis) ? a disease of the arteries in the heart.
The nicotine present in smoke causes:
Decreased oxygen to the heart
Increased blood pressure and heart rate
Increased risk of developing heart disease
Increase in blood clotting
Increased risk of becoming sick (especially among children -- respiratory infections are more common among children exposed to second-hand smoke)
Damage to cells that line coronary arteries and other blood vessels
What is the link between heart attacks and smoking?
A person?s risk of heart attack greatly increases with the number of cigarettes he or she smokes. Smokers continue to increase their risk of heart attack the longer they smoke. People who smoke a pack of cigarettes a day have more than twice the risk of heart attack compared with non-smokers. Women who smoke and also take birth control pills face a several-fold increase in their risk of heart attack, stroke, and peripheral vascular disease.
Philip Morris USA (PM USA) agrees with the overwhelming medical and scientific consensus that cigarette smoking causes lung cancer, heart disease, emphysema and other serious diseases in smokers. Smokers are far more likely to develop serious diseases, like lung cancer, than non-smokers. There is no safe cigarette.
Do you have any other good uses for nicotine (like the axe)?
Originally posted by: compuwiz1
I'm 94 years old..what the hell do I care! 😉
Originally posted by: mdbound
1. Ya, the argument about causation.....here's the problem: You CAN NOT give a healthy human being a shot of nicotine, or have them start smoking, and then 10 years later kill them and do an autopsy on them and find plaquing in their arteries. That would be a nice prospective study, able to prove cause. But, you'd end up with a dead human (actually like at least 1000 dead humans to have enough power).
But you can run case-control studies, where you find two groups of people that are similar in most regards except one group smokes, another doesn't. The sheer numbers of people in these studies help wash out "third hidden factor". Of course, this doesn't prove causation, but it's the best thing to do without having to kill somebody's aunt to prove that cigs are bad.
And, specifically from animal data, the "third hidden factor" is really not so hidden....it's nicotine. That's the addicitive part. It's also probably the single most dangerous (out of 4000 other) chemicals in terms of potency AND amount delivered.
Do you have any other good uses for nicotine (like the axe)?