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How do cigarettes affect the body? - Krishna Sudhir

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    Cigarettes aren’t good for us.
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    That’s hardly news--we’ve known
    about the dangers of smoking for decades.
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    But how exactly do cigarettes harm us?
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    Let’s look at what happens
    as their ingredients
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    make their way through our bodies,
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    and how we benefit physically
    when we finally give up smoking.
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    With each inhalation,
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    smoke brings its more than 5,000
    chemical substances
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    into contact with the body’s tissues.
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    From the start, tar,
    a black, resinous material,
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    begins to coat the teeth and gums,
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    damaging tooth enamel,
    and eventually causing decay.
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    Over time, smoke also damages
    nerve-endings in the nose,
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    causing loss of smell.
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    Inside the airways and lungs,
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    smoke increases
    the likelihood of infections,
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    as well as chronic diseases
    like bronchitis and emphysema.
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    It does this by damaging the cilia,
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    tiny hairlike structures whose job it is
    to keep the airways clean.
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    It then fills the alveoli,
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    tiny air sacs that enable the exchange
    of oxygen and carbon dioxide
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    between the lungs and blood.
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    A toxic gas called carbon monoxide
    crosses that membrane into the blood,
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    binding to hemoglobin
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    and displacing the oxygen
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    it would usually have transported
    around the body.
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    That’s one of the reasons smoking
    can lead to oxygen deprivation
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    and shortness of breath.
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    Within about 10 seconds,
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    the bloodstream carries a stimulant
    called nicotine to the brain,
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    triggering the release of dopamine
    and other neurotransmitters
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    including endorphins
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    that create the pleasurable sensations
    which make smoking highly addictive.
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    Nicotine and other chemicals
    from the cigarette
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    simultaneously cause constriction
    of blood vessels
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    and damage their delicate
    endothelial lining,
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    restricting blood flow.
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    These vascular effects lead
    to thickening of blood vessel walls
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    and enhance blood platelet stickiness,
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    increasing the likelihood
    that clots will form
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    and trigger heart attacks and strokes.
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    Many of the chemicals inside cigarettes
    can trigger dangerous mutations
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    in the body’s DNA that make cancers form.
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    Additionally, ingredients like arsenic
    and nickel
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    may disrupt the process of DNA repair,
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    thus compromising the body’s ability
    to fight many cancers.
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    In fact, about one of every three
    cancer deaths in the United States
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    is caused by smoking.
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    And it’s not just lung cancer.
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    Smoking can cause cancer
    in multiple tissues and organs,
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    as well as damaged eyesight
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    and weakened bones.
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    It makes it harder
    for women to get pregnant.
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    And in men,
    it can cause erectile dysfunction.
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    But for those who quit smoking,
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    there’s a huge positive upside
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    with almost immediate
    and long-lasting physical benefits.
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    Just 20 minutes after
    a smoker’s final cigarette,
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    their heart rate and blood pressure
    begin to return to normal.
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    After 12 hours,
    carbon monoxide levels stabilize,
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    increasing the blood’s
    oxygen-carrying capacity.
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    A day after ceasing,
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    heart attack risk begins to decrease as
    blood pressure and heart rates normalize.
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    After two days,
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    the nerve endings responsible
    for smell and taste start to recover.
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    Lungs become healthier
    after about one month,
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    with less coughing
    and shortness of breath.
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    The delicate hair-like cilia
    in the airways and lungs
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    start recovering within weeks,
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    and are restored after 9 months,
    improving resistance to infection.
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    By the one-year anniversary of quitting,
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    heart disease risk plummets to half
    as blood vessel function improves.
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    Five years in,
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    the chance of a clot forming
    dramatically declines,
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    and the risk of stroke
    continues to reduce.
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    After ten years, the chances
    of developing fatal lung cancer
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    go down by 50%,
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    probably because the body’s ability
    to repair DNA is once again restored.
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    Fifteen years in, the likelihood
    of developing coronary heart disease
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    is essentially the same
    as that of a non-smoker.
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    There’s no point pretending
    this is all easy to achieve.
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    Quitting can lead to anxiety
    and depression,
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    resulting from nicotine withdrawal.
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    But fortunately,
    such effects are usually temporary.
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    And quitting is getting easier,
    thanks to a growing arsenal of tools.
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    Nicotine replacement therapy through gum,
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    skin patches,
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    lozenges,
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    and sprays
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    may help wean smokers off cigarettes.
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    They work by stimulating
    nicotine receptors in the brain
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    and thus preventing withdrawal symptoms,
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    without the addition
    of other harmful chemicals.
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    Counselling and support groups,
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    cognitive behavioral therapy,
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    and moderate intensity exercise
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    also help smokers stay cigarette-free.
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    That’s good news,
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    since quitting puts you and your body
    on the path back to health.
Title:
How do cigarettes affect the body? - Krishna Sudhir
Speaker:
Krishna Sudhir
Description:

Cigarette Smoking

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:13

English subtitles

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