heart disease smoking

I rattling can’t respond this! plz support thanks :)
Two non-smoking men with baritone murder push both hit ECF cholesterin concentrations of 5mmol per litre. One of them starts to respiration and the ECF cholesterin immersion of the another increases to 7 mmol per litre. Which Negro is today at the greater venture from hunch disease and why?


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2 Responses to “SMOKING. and how it contributes to heart disease?”

  • Capry says:

    Your arteries are naturally smooth inside, smoking roughs them up like sandpaper, causing the cholesterol in your blood to stick to the arteries and narrow them. Over time cholestrol buildup creates blockages causing blood flow to stop, which causes heart attacks.

  • canada_winnipeg_man says:

    Smoking hardens the arteries, making the passage of the blood a lot harder to travel.Smoking suffocates all of your tissues for lack of oxygen, because carbon monoxide clings more tenaciously to hemoglobin than oxygen does.

    When arteries are narrowed enough, the heart works harder and harder to provide oxygen to your tissues, and when they get narrow enough, heart disease, heart attack, stroke, and death.
    The damage being done isn’t just to the vessels supplying blood to our heart and brain. It’s occurring, to one degree or another, inside every vessel in a smoker’s body. It effects everything from blood vessels associated with hearing to the skin’s blood supply that shows itself in wrinkles, early aging, hair loss and tooth loss.

    When we think of the damage being done to our body by smoking we tend to focus on our lungs. It’s natural to do so. We can hear the wheezing, feel the cough and actually sense the gradual deterioration occurring inside. But if we’re going to worry or be concerned based upon the magnitude or size of the health risk we face, then our greatest concern should be on the damage smoking inflicts upon our body’s blood flow systems. Yes, smoking related circulatory disease kills far more smokers than lung cancer and the damage started quickly and early.

    How close are your body’s tissues and organs to losing their blood supply? If curious, ask your physician to listen to your blood flow and tell you how it sounds, or to conduct other more detailed tests or exams.

    Take care always!

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