PROBLEMS OF TOBACCO
Tobacco products, including cigarettes, cigars, chewing  tobacco, snuff, and                 loose pipe tobacco, contain the dried, processed leaves  of the tobacco plant                 nicotiana rustica or nicotiana tabacum.  All forms of  tobacco contain nicotine,                 an extremely addictive drug that can act as both a  central nervous system                 stimulant and depressant.                    In addition to nicotine, tobacco contains thousands of  other chemicals and                 additives to enhance the effects and flavor of the  tobacco.  Many of these                 chemicals are known to cause cancer and various other  ailments.  Tobacco use                 remains the leading preventable cause of death in the  United States today,                 causing more than 430,000 deaths per year.             
EXTENT OF USE  
According to the 2001 National Household Survey on Drug  Abuse (NHSDA),                 about 66.5 million Americans reported past month use of a  tobacco product,                 or 29.5 percent of the population aged 12 and over.   Specifically, 24.9                 percent of that population smoked cigarettes, while 5.4%  used cigars, 1.0%                 smoked pipes, and 3.2% used smokeless tobacco.             
HISTORY
Tobacco is a plant that was originally native to the  Americas, and many                 Native Americans thought of the plant as a gift from the  "Great Spirit"                 and used it in religious ceremonies.  Rodrigo de Jerez, a  Spanish explorer,                 brought tobacco back to Spain in the early 1500's, where  the habit of                 smoking became popular very quickly.  As it became more  popular, its value                 skyrocketed, and tobacco was used as money in the early  American                 Colonies.             
Snuff use was very popular in 18th Century Europe, but by  the 19th                 century cigars had become the primary tobacco product.   In the mid-1800's,                 Philip Morris, J.E. Liggett, and R.J. Reynolds began  their tobacco                 companies.  Then came the invention of matches and  cigarette rolling                 machines.  Cigarette use began to skyrocket.  During  World War I soldiers                 were provided with free cigarettes.  Between 1910 and  1920, per capita                 consumption of cigarettes increased from 94 to 419 per  year.                The issue shows cigarette smoking and cancer was already  evident.                  In 1930, the lung cancer rate for white men in the U.S.  was 4.9 per 100,000.                  By 1948, the rate had increased to 27.1 per 100,000.
 
The rapid increase in smoking and its health consequences  led Congress to                 mandate in 1965 that a Surgeon General's warning appear  on every pack of                 cigarettes.  In the 1970's, airlines began offering  nonsmoking sections                 on flights, and smoking was prohibited in many public  spaces.  In the 1980's,                 research revealed that secondhand smoke, as well as  smokeless tobacco,                 have serious health consequences, including cancer.  The  1990's saw a great                 deal of legal action taken against the major tobacco  companies as well as                 numerous campaigns to inform the public about the dangers  of smoking.  In                 1999, the Philip Morris Tobacco Company recognized that  "there is an                 overwhelming medical and scientific consensus that  cigarette smoking causes                 lung cancer, heart disease, emphysema and other serious  diseases in smokers...                 there is no safe cigarette... cigarette smoking is                 addictive."    Around this time, major tobacco                 companies began to confess to the fact that they had been  focusing their                 advertising campaigns toward young people.             
METHODS OF USE
Tobacco is most often smoked, usually in the form of  cigarettes,                 cigars, or in pipes.  Another method of smoking, usually  found in India                 and the Middle East, is through a large waterpipe,  usually called a hookah,                 nargile (nar-gee-leh), or shisha.  These types of pipes  are commonly used                 to smoke flavored tobacco that includes pieces of fruit  and is held together                 with sticky molasses.  Other forms of smoking tobacco  include "bidis"                 (bee-dees) - tobacco wrapped in a leaf and tied with a  string - and                 "clove" cigarettes, which are basically normal cigarettes  but include                 cloves for flavoring, or just cloves alone.  Chewing  tobacco or "dip"                 is a form of smokeless tobacco, in which the user holds  the tobacco in                 his/her mouth, absorbing nicotine thorough the gums and  tongue.  "Snuff"                 is tobacco that has been dried and processed into a  powder.  This powder                 is snorted into the nose, where it is absorbed through  the nasal passages.             
EFFECTS ON THE BRAIN
Tobacco has a potent effect on the brain, regardless of  the route of                 administration.  When a smoker inhales tobacco smoke,  over 4,000 chemicals                 are released, including nicotine and hundreds of other  carcinogens.                  Nicotine, when smoked, reaches the brain in a matter of  seconds.                  Nicotine from chewing tobacco takes a little longer to  reach the brain,                 as it must first be absorbed into the bloodstream through  the gums.  At                 any rate, when nicotine reaches the brain, it acts as a  stimulant,                 causing the brain to release excess                 neurotransmitters                including dopamine - a neurotransmitter associated with  pleasure and                 motivation.  A person can become addicted to nicotine  even after just a                 few uses because the brain adjusts itself and develops a  level of nicotine                 tolerance that the addict must reach in order to maintain  the feeling of                 comfort.  Once this comfort level has been established, a  lack of nicotine                 in the brain will cause uncomfortable withdrawal symptoms  in the user.                  These withdrawal symptoms can make the user edgy and  irritable, and using                 tobacco while in this state will have a sedative effect  on the user.                    It is important to note that smoking, whether it is  called "social                 smoking" or simply trying a cigarette, can easily lead to  an addiction.             
SHORT-TERM EFFECTS
             Short-Term Effects of Smoking             
- Addiction to nicotine
 - Damage to the respiratory system
 - Decreased lung capacity
 - Chronic cough
 - Bronchitis, asthma
 - Bad breath; bad taste in mouth
 - Smelly hair and clothes
 - Yellow or brown stains on teeth
 - Increased likelihood of drug use and risky behavior
 - Death from fire - the #1 cause of death from fire is smoking
 
              Short-Term Effects of Chewing Tobacco             
- Addiction to nicotine
 - Receding gums; permanent gum loss
 - Sensitive teeth
 - Tooth decay
 - Sores, patches, and lumps in mouth
 - Bad breath; bad taste in mouth
 - Stains on clothing
 - Excess saliva production; drooling
 - Stained teeth
 
LONG -TERM EFFECTS OF SMOKING OR CHEWING TOBACCO
As stated before, smoking is the leading preventable  cause of                 death in the United States.  Long-term tobacco use brings  very                 serious health risks to the user.  About 181,000 people  die each                 year in the United States from smoking-related heart  disease and                 stroke, 158,000 die from smoking-related cancer, and  about 123,000                 die from other lung diseases.             
Heart Problems:
Tobacco use has many adverse effects on the heart, including hypertension (high blood pressure), blocked blood vessels, heart attacks, weakened pumping of the heart, narrow arteries leading to heart attack and death. In addition, weakened bloodflow to the brain can cause strokes.
Tobacco use has many adverse effects on the heart, including hypertension (high blood pressure), blocked blood vessels, heart attacks, weakened pumping of the heart, narrow arteries leading to heart attack and death. In addition, weakened bloodflow to the brain can cause strokes.
Cancers:
Several types of cancers commonly afflict the tobacco user. Lung, upper respiratory tract, and cervical cancers are primarily found in smokers while stomach cancer is mainly found in chewing tobacco users. Other cancers that can attack users of both forms of tobacco include cancers of the larynx, mouth, throat, pancreas, kidney, and bladder.
Several types of cancers commonly afflict the tobacco user. Lung, upper respiratory tract, and cervical cancers are primarily found in smokers while stomach cancer is mainly found in chewing tobacco users. Other cancers that can attack users of both forms of tobacco include cancers of the larynx, mouth, throat, pancreas, kidney, and bladder.
Lung Disease:
Smoking causes chronic bronchitis, changing the size and shape of the airways of the lungs, enlarging the mucous glands, and causing coughing and production of excess phlegm. It is also the leading cause of emphysema, a lung condition marked by an abnormal increase in the size of the air spaces, resulting in labored breathing and an increased susceptibility to infection.
Smoking causes chronic bronchitis, changing the size and shape of the airways of the lungs, enlarging the mucous glands, and causing coughing and production of excess phlegm. It is also the leading cause of emphysema, a lung condition marked by an abnormal increase in the size of the air spaces, resulting in labored breathing and an increased susceptibility to infection.
Other Health Problems:
Tobacco use can cause reproductive damage, including abnormal sperm cells and impotence in men and menstrual disorders, early menopause, and difficulty maintaining pregnancy in women. Smoking during pregnancy can lead to miscarriage, stillbirth, low birth weight, premature birth, or Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). Children born to women who smoked during pregnancy can develop upper respiratory problems, ear complications, asthma, and learning and behavior problems. Other damage that long-term tobacco use can cause includes prematurely wrinkled skin, gum and tooth loss, lost or weakened sense of taste and smell, weakened immune system, stomach ulcers, and unwanted weight fluctuation.
Tobacco use can cause reproductive damage, including abnormal sperm cells and impotence in men and menstrual disorders, early menopause, and difficulty maintaining pregnancy in women. Smoking during pregnancy can lead to miscarriage, stillbirth, low birth weight, premature birth, or Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). Children born to women who smoked during pregnancy can develop upper respiratory problems, ear complications, asthma, and learning and behavior problems. Other damage that long-term tobacco use can cause includes prematurely wrinkled skin, gum and tooth loss, lost or weakened sense of taste and smell, weakened immune system, stomach ulcers, and unwanted weight fluctuation.
The Guardian Newspapers                 Web site has a very cool interactive guide to smoking and  health.                  Roll over the corpse to see the different effects smoking  has on the human body.             
QUITTING SMOKING
Nicotine is one of the most addictive substances known to  humankind.  In the face of grossly negative consequences, many people  are still unable to quit the habit.  A 1992 Gallup survey found that if  they had to do it over again, 70% of smokers aged 12 to 17 would not  have started smoking, and 66% reported that they want to quit.  About  half of these teen smokers had made a serious effort to stop smoking,  but failed.
Today there are many treatments available for someone  trying to kick                 the habit.  Nicotine replacement treatments such as  nicotine gum and                 patches can help relieve cravings, and recently nicotine  nasal sprays,                 inhalers, and mints have been introduced.  Also, the  antidepressant                 bupropion (Zyban) has been shown to be an effective  treatment for                 limiting tobacco cravings.
There are also behavioral treatments that can help train a  person to                 avoid smoking.  In general, behavioral methods are used  to identify                 high-risk relapse situations, create an aversion to  smoking, develop                 self-monitoring of smoking behavior, and establish coping  responses.                  Behavioral and nicotine-replacement therapies can both be  successful                 and even more so when used together.  However, the harsh  reality is                 that over 90 percent of the people who try to quit  smoking either                 relapse or return to smoking within one year, with the  large majority                 relapsing within a week.             
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