SMOKING:
What are the side effect?
The effects of any drug (including tobacco) vary from person to person. How tobacco affects a person depends on many things including their size, weight and health, also whether the person is used to taking it. The effects of tobacco, as with any drug, also depend on the amount taken.
Some of the effects that may be experienced after smoking tobacco include:
-Initial stimulation, then reduction in activity of brain and nervous system
-Increased alertness and concentration
-Feelings of mild euphoria
-Feelings of relaxation
-Increased blood pressure and heart rate
-Decreased blood flow to fingers and toes
-Decreased skin temperature
-Bad breath
-Decreased appetite
-Dizziness
-Nausea, abdominal cramps and vomiting
-Headache
-Coughing, due to smoke irritation.
SOME LONG TERM EFFECTS,,,
Tar in cigarettes coats the lungs and can cause lung and throat cancer in smokers. It is also responsible for the yellow–brown staining on smokers’ fingers and teeth.
Carbon monoxide in cigarettes reduces the amount of oxygen available to the muscles, brain and blood. This means the whole body—especially the heart—must work harder. Over time this causes airways to narrow and blood pressure to rise, which can lead to heart attack and stroke.
High levels of CO, together with nicotine, increase the risk of heart disease, hardening of the arteries and other circulatory problems.
--Increased risk of stroke and brain damage