Smoking during pregnancy ups SIDS risk

By timesofindia.indiatimes.com,

Researchers Hemant Sawnani, Erik Olsen, and Narong Simakajornboon, from Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical CenterOhio, summarized the evidence from both human and animal studies, showing nicotine (in cigarette smoke) interferes with the development of the parts of the brain that control breathing.

Prenatal exposure to cigarette smoke puts infants at a 2- to 5-fold increased risk of SIDS and contributes to premature birth – another risk factor for SIDS.

Nicotine exposure in utero leads to altered breathing patterns and ventilatory responses that compromise respiratory arousal and auto-resuscitation.

Infants of mothers who smoked during pregnancy have more pauses in breathing (infant apnea) and have decreased ability to wake up from sleep in response to low oxygen.

This sheds light on why smoking during pregnancy increases risk for Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS, crib death).

“These findings highlight the importance of public health policies to prevent the development of tobacco dependence in adolescent girls and the importance of treatment of maternal tobacco dependence prior to pregnancy,” said Harold Farber, associate professor of Pediatrics, Section of Pulmonology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX.

UK: Smoking Breaks at Work no Longer “Free”

By topnews.co.uk,

Norfolk’s Breckland Council imposes a new rule for smokers to no longer include cigarette breaks in their working time but check-out every time they want to go for a smoke.

After England, Northern Ireland and Wales introduced the smoking ban in public spaces in 2007, smokers were forced to leave their offices for a cigarette in order to guarantee a smoke-free working environment. Now, the ability to smoke outside is limited as well because employees need to compensate for the time losses caused by cigarette breaks.

The pro-smoker lobby criticizes the decision as “tyrannical” and underlines that only smokers have to check out if they leave their desks while their non-smoking colleagues are still allowed to go for coffee or fresh air breaks.

The Lobby’s Director, Simon Clark, points out: “Are they going to introduce clocking in and off for people who go on the internet, on Facebook, or people who want to have a cup of coffee? Many smokers believe having the occasional cigarette allows them to refocus”.

The Council justifies its decision by simply balancing out the extra time smokers take in comparison to their co-workers. An official underlines: “I think people have to accept that some non-smokers do feel a little bit of resentment across the table when they are sitting there and their colleagues keep getting up and going out of the building”.

The Council stresses the fact that smokers should not be urged to stop smokingafter the decision but be conscious about not taking their working time for the additional breaks. The new smoking rule is interpreted by the public policy advisors as an issue of fairness.

 

 

Ban smoking on campus

By app.com,

The board of trustees at Brookdale Community College is expected to vote next month on a campuswide ban on smoking. The only place smokers could light up would be in their cars.

The policy, which would take effect in January, should be adopted, as long as the college makes a commitment to providing smoking cessation for students and staff who want to break their addiction to nicotine.

The current policy allows smoking only at six gazebos around campus. College administrators are well within their rights to pursue policies that will benefit both the campus and the health of the students. And smokers at Brookdale should be grateful that their campus does not go as far as as other colleges: Ocean County College, for example, enforces a total ban on smoking on campus.

At the Oct. 14 board of trustees meeting, Brookdale President Peter Burnham said the penalty provisions of the ban would be phased in gradually, with offenders initially being given warnings. Repeat offenses could result in fines of up to $200.

The goal here should not only be to safeguard the health of nonsmokers and the beauty of the campus, but to give those students and faculty addicted to nicotine one more incentive to quit their expensive habit.

 

Anxiety Make it Harder to Kick the Habit

by emaxhealth.com,

A new study conducted by the University of Wisconsin concludes that smokers with a history of anxiety disorder have a more difficult time trying to quit smoking making it harder to kick the habit.

Tobacco is the biggest cause of preventable death and disabilty in the United States. Nicotine is highly addictive and can be hard to quit. While overall quit rates for the study were high, participants with anxiety diagnoses were much less likely to quit smoking.

Study results also showed that anxiety diagnoses were very common among participants and that more than a third of them met criteria for at least one anxiety diagnosis in their lifetime.

Many smokers claim that they smoke to calm their nerves and cigarettes have helped them to get through some of life’s most trying challenges however, they contain nicotine, which is an addictive drug and is a stimulant which is known to cause excitement. It will also intensify worries and make them seem bigger than they are which can lead to an anxiety disorder.

Out of all 1,504 study participants, 455 had had a panic attack in the past which included 199 social anxiety disorders, and 99 generalized anxiety disorders. There has been other research that has shown that up to 25 percent of the more than 50 million smokers in the U.S. had at least one anxiety disorder in their lifetime. Researchers are starting to notice that very little research has addressed smoking in this population.

Lead author Megan Piper says it surprised her that the nicotine lozenge and patch alone or in combination failed to help patients with an anxiety history to quit smoking. “Further research is needed to identify better counseling and medication treatments to help patients with anxiety disorders to quit smoking,” Piper says.

Smokers in the study with anxiety disorders also reported higher levels of nicotine dependence and withdrawal symptoms prior to quitting. Researchers are excited to discover that anxiety makes it harder to kick the habit. Anxiety medications alone haven’t boosted cessation rates and Piper is planning further research to test other quit-smoking counseling interventions and medications with patients who have had an anxiety diagnosis.

Smoking isn’t just bad for your lungs

By UsaToday,

No matter how you slice it, puffing on a cigarette, or any other tobacco product for that matter, simply ups the ante for more health complications. Smoking causes nearly 1 in 5 deaths each year. About 8.6 million Americans suffer from smoking-related chronic conditions, including chronic bronchitis, emphysema and heart disease.

Cancer

The smoking-cancer link is well-known to most: Smoking causes at least 30% of all cancer deaths and 87% of lung cancer deaths, according to the American Cancer Society. Smoking increases the risk of at least 15 cancers, including those of the throat, nasal cavity, lip, mouth, larynx, esophagus, pancreas, cervix, kidney, bladder and stomach, as well as acute myeloid leukemia.

 

 

Diabetes

Diabetes and smoking don’t mix. Tobacco use can elevate blood sugar levels and lead to insulin resistance, say experts at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. The more you smoke, the bigger your risk: More than 20 cigarettes a day almost doubles smokers’ risk of developing diabetes, compared with nonsmokers’. “People with diabetes already have higher cardiovascular risks,” says David Kendall of the American Diabetes Association. Smoking “just adds to the burden of that risk.”

Heart

Smoking’s assault on the heart doubles or triples the risk of dying from coronary heart disease, the leading cause of death in the USA, the American Heart Association says. The toll is enormous: Each year, nearly 900,000 people die of coronary heart disease.

That’s because smoking narrows blood vessels supplying the heart and other parts of the body; it also promotes blood clotting, raises blood pressure and weakens the biggest artery in the abdomen, sometimes causing it to burst, a condition called abdominal aortic aneurysm, AHA says. Secondhand smoke kills 23,000 to 70,000 people prematurely each year.

Pregnancy and childhood

During pregnancy, smoking increases the risk of complications that can endanger a mother’s life. It nearly doubles the risk of having a low-birth-weight baby and is a leading cause of preterm labor, the March of Dimes says. Smoking causes an estimated 910 infant deaths a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Babies who breathe in secondhand smoke are at increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome, asthma, ear infections and other problems.

Skin

If you’re going for a rosy glow, nix the smokes.

“The nicotine in cigarettes causes narrowing of the blood vessels in the outermost layers of your skin,” says internist Richard Hurt, director of the Nicotine Dependence Center at the Mayo Clinic. “This impairs blood flow. … Your skin doesn’t get as much oxygen, an important nutrient.”

He says tobacco contains more than 4,000 chemicals, many of which can damage collagen and elastin, fibers that give skin its strength and elasticity. As a result, skin begins to sag and wrinkle prematurely.

Quitting improves skin’s health and appearance, says cosmetic dermatologist Hema Sundaram, author of Face Value. She says smoking also raises the risk of skin cancers, slows its healing rate and worsens hormonal imbalances during perimenopause and menopause.

 

Smoking? It’s all in your head: Israeli researcher

By English.news.cn

A recent study at Tel Aviv University suggests that the urge to light up a “coffin nail” is more a psychological issue than one of a chemical dependency, which may make finding ways of quitting easier.

“These findings might not be popular with advocates of the nicotine addiction theory, because they undermine the physiological role of nicotine and emphasize mind over matter when it comes to smoking,” admitted Dr. Reuven Dar of the university’s psychology department, who published his findings in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology.

Dar and his team monitored how flight attendants on Israel’s El Al airlines dealt with the craving for a cigarette during the 10- 13 hour Tel Aviv-New York run, and on short hops to Europe and back.

As it turned out, via a questionnaire the smokers filled out after each flight, there was no difference in the intensity of the craving for a cigarette on either route, and the need to smoke at the end of the shorter flight was even higher than the intercontinental haul.

One finding was that cravings increased in anticipation of the flight landing, whatever the flight’s total duration, leading the researchers to conclude that the effect comes from psychological cues rather than the physiological results of nicotine deprivation.

In a 2005 study, Dar spoke with a group of religious Jews who smoked. Jewish religious law forbids making fire to light a cigarette until the Sabbath ends 25 hours later.

Dar queried them about their smoking cravings in three separate days: the Sabbath, a regular weekday, and a weekday on which they’ d been asked to abstain.

These smokers noted very low cravings on the Sabbath morning, when they knew they couldn’t smoke until sunset. But the need grew as that first post-Sabbath puff drew closer.

Dar concluded that nicotine is not an addictive substance like heroin, which creates true systemic and biologically based withdrawal symptoms.

Dar believed that smokers do so for benefits like oral gratification, sensory pleasure and fitting in with others.

He said that if smoking is a habit, then more tightly-focused techniques could be used to break that habit, such as psychological and behavior-modification programs.

Some 20 percent of the world’s population smoke, namely about 1. 35 billion people, according to the World Health Organization.

Can’t quit smoking? Blame your genes

By Toronto Star

It started with a pack of Players stolen from her dad, who bought cigarettes by the carton to save money. Sasha Manoli knew where he kept them — in a kitchen cupboard. She snatched a pack on the day she decided to smoke. She was 14.

After meeting her friend, the teenagers went to Laurentide Park, which lies besides the Don Valley Pkwy. near York Mills Rd. It was winter. They went over to a pine tree and lay down under it in the snow. Manoli lit one cigarette and “half-smoked,” barely inhaling.

“I really remember the smell and the taste, but I can’t describe it,” she said. “But there was something very distinct.”

What Manoli didn’t know at the time was her decision to smoke may have had less to do with peer pressure and perhaps more to do with fate.

It’s an acknowledged theory in medicine that genes determine how quickly and how deeply people become addicted to smoking. Now researchers are looking for ways to personalize medicine to treat nicotine addiction so that everyone, even people who have a genetic predisposition to smoking, can quit.

Although peer pressure often propels teens to start smoking, Rachel Tyndale, a biochemistry professor at the University of Toronto, says your genes may determine whether or not you become addicted.

“Genes are not probably behind the first cigarette you pick up when you’re 13 or 14, which is usually influenced by your peers,” said Tyndale, also a researcher at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. “But once you’ve started to have cigarettes, then that component of genetics is quite strong.”

Manoli, now 25, had thought about smoking before she started that winter day.

“I had taken a cigarette from my mother’s pack before and held it and thought about it,” she said. “Just holding the cigarette felt like a huge betrayal.”

The Toronto native has always been surrounded by smoke. Both of her parents and her sister smoke. All started in their teens.

By smoking she was defying hopes that she wouldn’t follow her smoking destiny.

Even her grandmother, who started in her 40s, smokes.

“It’s kind of all my grandmother and I do together. We sit and chat; that usually involves smoking,” Manoli said.

This kind of legacy of family smoking is one element researchers like Tyndale look for when they are determining the influence of genes on a smoker’s addiction.

Tyndale works with Dr. Peter Selby, director of addiction programs at CAMH, to understand the way genetic factors determine how quickly nicotine — the addictive element in cigarettes — is metabolized by the liver.

“If you’re very fast at it, you tend to inhale more deeply and smoke more cigarettes. If you’re very slow, you tend to smoke fewer cigarettes and inhale less deeply,” Tyndale said.

Genes can influence a person’s addiction to cigarettes in two ways: Some people have a greater number of nicotine receptors in their brain, causing them to have deeper cravings for the buzz of nicotine; or their genes can determine how quickly they break down nicotine through the production of an enzyme in your liver.

Selby, a doctor trained in psychiatry and family medicine, tries to take genetics into account when counselling patients.

“Many multiple genes, when taken together, account for about 60 per cent of why people start smoking and why they have difficulty stopping,” he said.

His work has revealed that our genes can determine whether people enjoy the taste of smoking, how quickly someone can become addicted or whether someone becomes addicted at all.

Philip Morris wants Supreme Court to throw out rulings on smoking dangers

app

The filing with the high court Friday marks the latest round in a landmark legal fight that has dragged on for more than a decade.

Philip Morris USA is the manufacturer of Marlboro cigarettes and more than a dozen other brands. It said in new court papers that the Supreme Court should review a federal appeals court ruling which largely upheld a judge’s earlier findings that the industry engaged in racketeering and fraud. Other tobacco companies, including Philip Morris’ parent Altria Group, Inc., and the Obama administration, also are expected to file separate appeals Friday. The government is seeking billions from the industry.

Pitch made to ban smoking at soccer matches

CBC

The Winnipeg Youth Soccer Association wants to ban smoking within 50 metres of any youth game following complaints from referees and parents that the air is being fouled by sideline smokers.

“There were a couple of incidents last year where a referee had to stop a game because somebody had lit up … right on the sideline and it was wafting onto the field,” association president Alastair Gillespie said Monday. “We’re doing this for the protection of the kids.”

Okla. coalition pushes smoking ban in restaurants

Members of Smoke-Free Oklahoma lobbied for the legislation Monday at the state Capitol. American Cancer Society volunteer Tammy Padgett says the bill would improve the health of Oklahomans and help lift the state’s health ranking from 49th in the nation.

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