^That's really interesting. Makes it almost seem as if all the damages of smoking can be almost reversed with quitting, but I doubt that's the case for long time (20+ years) smokers.
I realize nicotine is bad for you. Is there anywhere I can read about the negative effects of nicotine vs. the negative effects of nicotine + whatever else is in a cigarette?
I debating whether to get an E-cig, i just feel I would smoke it so much more than I would normal cigarettes and it would be just as bad as normal cigarettes.
Hm... Maybe I'll just stop smoking when I'm sober altogether, I can't imagine smoking when i'm drunk, which is probably average every 2 weeks is going to be a huge threat to my health.
@captain.heroin
Oh I wish I could smoke a joint for every cigarette I smoke, i just can't be that stoned that often

maybe if it were really crumby weed... I mean that's gotta be part of it too, I also just enjoy smoking anything, the act of smoking I enjoy.
It would be better to use an e-cigarette more often than actual cigarettes. As stated above, people have a tendency to hit an e-cig more often, but less at once - when people smoke a cigarette, they often smoke the whole damn thing. Sometimes they put it out early, but they often will smoke the entire thing in a sitting. You frankly don't need to smoke an entire cigarette to get the nicotine in you, a few puffs off an e-cig will do just as well, in a smaller amount of time.
The link I posted earlier speaks about nicotine's toxicity on the human body - nicotine is still not a drug worthy of being used in a non-medical setting but it's definitely better to use an e-cig than cigarettes.
If you like smoking, I would suggest cannabis or salvia - although some people dislike one or both of these drugs. I still suggest an e-cig for people who would smoke cigarettes without being able to quit in traditional ways (chantix, bupropion, cold turkey, etc.)
Maybe you will live a little less, two or three years less than you would have lived. But what is the point of living three years more? What will you do by living three years more? You will create a little more trouble in the world -- so better you go a little earlier. And the world is too much populated.
It's not just about living a few years extra into your elderly years (and it's way more than 3 or 4 on average)... it's also about the quality of life you'll experience as a young person.
Let me list some examples...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_effects_of_tobacco
Male and female smokers lose
an average of 13.2 and 14.5 years of life, respectively.[23]
According to the results of a 50 year study of 34,486 male British doctors, at least half of all lifelong smokers die earlier as a result of smoking.[16]
Smokers are three times as likely to die before the age of 60 or 70 as non-smokers.[24][25][26]
In the United States, cigarette smoking and exposure to tobacco smoke accounts for roughly one in five,[27] or at at least 443,000 premature deaths annually.[28]
To put this into context, in the US alone, tobacco kills the equivalent of three jumbo jets full of people crashing every day, with no survivors.[29] On a worldwide basis, this equates to a single jumbo jet every hour.[30]
The primary risks of tobacco usage include
many forms of cancer, particularly lung cancer,[31] kidney cancer,[32] cancer of the larynx and head and neck, breast cancer,[33][34] bladder cancer,[35] cancer of the esophagus,[36] cancer of the pancreas[37] and stomach cancer.[38]
There is some evidence suggesting a small increased risk of myeloid leukaemia, squamous cell sinonasal cancer, liver cancer, colorectal cancer, cancers of the gallbladder,the adrenal gland, the small intestine, and various childhood cancers. Recent studies have established a stronger relationship between tobacco smoke, including secondhand smoke, andcervical cancer in women.[39]
In smoking, long term exposure to compounds found in the smoke (e.g., carbon monoxide and cyanide) are believed to be responsible for pulmonary damage and for loss of elasticity in the alveoli, leading to emphysema and COPD.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) caused by smoking, is a permanent, incurable (often terminal) reduction of pulmonary capacity characterised by shortness of breath, wheezing, persistent cough with sputum, and damage to the lungs, including emphysema and chronic bronchitis.[41]The carcinogen acrolein and its derivatives also contribute to the chronic inflammation present in COPD.[42]
Smoking also increases the chance of heart disease, stroke, atherosclerosis, and peripheral vascular disease. Several ingredients of tobacco lead to the narrowing of blood vessels, increasing the likelihood of a blockage, and thus a heart attack or stroke. According to a study by an international team of researchers, people under 40 are five times more likely to have a heart attack if they smoke.[44]
In addition to increasing the risk of kidney cancer,
smoking can also contribute to additional renal damage. Smokers are at a significantly increased risk for chronic kidney disease than non-smokers.[50] A history of smoking encourages the progression of diabetic nephropathy.
A study of an outbreak of A(H1N1) influenza in an Israeli military unit of 336 healthy young men to determine the relation of cigarette smoking to the incidence of clinically apparent influenza, revealed that, of 168 smokers, 68.5 percent had influenza, as compared with 47.2 percent of nonsmokers.
Influenza was also more severe in the smokers; 50.6 percent of the smokers lost work days or required bed rest, or both, as compared with 30.1 percent of the nonsmokers.[52]
Perhaps the most serious oral condition that can arise is that of oral cancer.
However, smoking also increases the risk for various other oral diseases, some almost completely exclusive to tobacco users. The National Institutes of Health, through the National Cancer Institute, determined in 1998 that "cigar smoking causes a variety of cancers including cancers of the oral cavity (lip, tongue, mouth, throat), esophagus, larynx, and lung."[48] Pipe smoking involves significant health risks,[56][57] particularly oral cancer.[58][59] Roughly half of periodontitis or inflammation around the teeth cases are attributed to current or former smoking. Smokeless tobacco causes gingival recession and white mucosal lesions. Up to 90% of periodontitis patients who are not helped by common modes of treatment are smokers. Smokers have significantly greater loss of bone height than nonsmokers, and the trend can be extended to pipe smokers to have more bone loss than nonsmokers.[60] Smoking has been proven to be an important factor in the staining of teeth.[61][62] Halitosis or bad breath is common among tobacco smokers.[63]
Tooth loss has been shown to be 2[64] to 3 times[65] higher in smokers than in non-smokers.[66] In addition, complications may further include leukoplakia, the adherent white plaques or patches on the mucous membranes of the oral cavity, including the tongue, and a loss of taste sensation or salivary changes.
Tobacco is also linked to susceptibility to infectious diseases, particularly in the lungs.
Smoking more than 20cigarettes a day increases the risk of tuberculosis by two to four times,[67][68] and being a current smoker has been linked to a fourfold increase in the risk of invasive pneumococcal disease.[69] It is believed that smoking increases the risk of these and other pulmonary and respiratory tract infections both through structural damage and through effects on the immune system.
The effects on the immune system include an increase in CD4+ cell production attributable to nicotine, which has tentatively been linked to increased HIV susceptibility.[70] The usage of tobacco also increases rates of infection: common cold and bronchitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, emphysema andchronic bronchitis in particular.[citation needed]
Smoking reduces the risk of Kaposi's sarcoma in people without HIV infection.[71]One study found this only with the male population and could not draw any conclusions for the female participants in the study.[72]
Incidence of impotence is approximately 85 percent higher in male smokers compared to non-smokers,[12] and it is a key cause of erectile dysfunction (ED).[12][13][14] Smoking causes impotence because it promotes arterial narrowing.[73]
Smoking is harmful to the ovaries, potentially causing female infertility, and the degree of damage is dependent upon the amount and length of time a woman smokes. Nicotine and other harmful chemicals in cigarettes interfere with the body’s ability to create estrogen, a hormone that regulates folliculogenesis and ovulation. Also, cigarette smoking interferes with folliculogenesis, embryo transport, endometrial receptivity, endometrial angiogenesis, uterine blood flow and the uterine myometrium.[74] Some damage is irreversible, but stopping smoking can prevent further damage.[75][76] Smokers are 60% more likely to be infertile than non-smokers.[77] Smoking reduces the chances of IVF producing a live birth by 34% and increases the risk of an IVF pregnancy miscarrying by 30%.
"Smokers often report that cigarettes help relieve feelings of stress. However, the stress levels of adult smokers are slightly higher than those of nonsmokers, adolescent smokers report increasing levels of stress as they develop regular patterns of smoking, and smoking cessation leads to reduced stress. Far from acting as an aid for mood control,
nicotine dependency seems to exacerbate stress. This is confirmed in the daily mood patterns described by smokers, with normal moods during smoking and worsening moods between cigarettes. Thus, the apparent relaxant effect of smoking only reflects the reversal of the tension and irritability that develop during nicotine depletion. Dependent smokers need nicotine to remain feeling normal."
The usage of tobacco can also create cognitive dysfunction. There seems to be an increased risk of Alzheimer's disease, although "case–control and cohort studies produce conflicting results as to the direction of the association between smoking and AD".[86]
Smoking has been found to contribute to dementia and cognitive decline,[87]reduced memory and cognitive abilities in adolescents,[88] and brain shrinkage (cerebral atrophy).
Studies suggest that smoking decreases appetite, but did not conclude that overweight people should smoke or that their health would improve by smoking. This is also a cause of heart diseases.[113] Smoking also decreases weight by overexpressing the gene AZGP1 which stimulates lipolysis.[114]
Smoking causes about 10% of the global burden of fire deaths,[115] and smokers are placed at an increased risk of injury-related deaths in general, partly due to also experiencing an increased risk of dying in a motor vehicle crash.[116]
Smoking increases the risk of symptoms associated with Crohn's disease (a dose-dependent effect with use of greater than 15 cigarettes per day).[117][118][119][120] There is some evidence for decreased rates of endometriosis in infertile smoking women,[121] although other studies have found that smoking increases the risk in infertile women.[122] There is little or no evidence of a protective effect in fertile women. Some preliminary data from 1996 suggested a reduced incidence of uterine fibroids,[123] but overall the evidence is unconvincing.[124]
Current research shows that tobacco smokers who are exposed to residential radon are twice as likely to develop lung cancer as non-smokers.[125] As well, the risk of developing lung cancer from asbestos exposure is twice as likely for smokers than for non-smokers.[126]
New research has found that women who smoke are at significantly increased risk of developing an abdominalaortic aneurysm, a condition in which a weak area of the abdominal aorta expands or bulges.[127]
Smoking leads to an increased risk of bone fractures, especially hip fractures.[128]
It also leads to slower wound-healing after surgery, and an increased rate of postoperative healing complication.[129]
========
Frankly I bolded some of the most important things that people need to know about (you may or may not have heard of all of these). I find it the most shocking that so many men still smoke despite the
huge increase in impotence as a result, which is why I increased the font size of that section.
Then again, it's your life and your dick...but I know I like mine to work.
