Tobacco: A Deadly Killer
By: Will Parsons
Tobacco’s effects on the brain are nearly as horrifying as
the rest. When consumed, tobacco goes straight into the bloodstream. When
entered into the blood, the nicotine inside the tobacco almost instantly
triggers the adrenal glands to discharge the hormone epinephrine, otherwise
known as adrenaline. However, then the adrenaline stimulates the central
nervous system and increases breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure. Several
of these effects could undermine or weaken your blood vessels, cause blood
coagulation, or possibly generate a stroke, or deprive your organs and tissues
of oxygen. Tobacco’s nicotine also increases levels of dopamine, which gives
you a high. Sounds like an even-handed set of consequences, right?
Tobacco doesn’t exclusively have negative effects on the
brain; tobacco affects the lungs in negative ways as well. When smoking
tobacco, the cells that create mucus in the lungs go through an
intensification-like process. The cells increase in size, as well as increase
the overall number of cells. The lungs cannot adequately clean the additional
mucus, so this leads to airways being clogged by the mucus. Moreover, the
excess mucus leaves you apt for further infection. Smoking tobacco also
inflames and agitates the lungs, and this can lead to excessive coughing.
Smoked tobacco also dismantles your lungs and lung tissue, which decreases the
amount of air space and blood vessels in your lungs. Less oxygen to sections of
the body is just one consequence to less airspace and blood vessels in your
lungs. Cilia are bristle-like hairs that line and cleanse the lungs. Tobacco
smoke diminishes the movement of cilia which can lead to not having your lungs
sanitary. Only one cigarette could slow the action of cilia and reduce the
number of cilia in the lungs.
Tobacco especially has disastrous effects on the body,
especially the bones and muscles. Smoking tobacco affects the bones, making
them insubstantial, which makes you more prone to bone-related diseases such as
osteoporosis and bone fracture. Additionally, tobacco causes your muscles to
prolong recovery. So as an outcome, the speed of your body’s curative process
deteriorates, and another repercussion of this is that the muscle will tear, as
well as the inflammation of tendons. When the muscle is inadequately healing
itself, it will conclude in muscle inflammation. Muscle inflammation provokes
you to be fatigued and sore more frequently than you would have if you didn’t
use tobacco products. A curtailment of blood supply to the bones is drawn to
the use of tobacco. And the nicotine that’s inside of tobacco will depreciate
the production of bone-producing cells known as osteoblasts, so they overall
make less, strong bones.
Although there are so many ways to use
tobacco and get drawn in, doing so is reprehensible in the long run. The
effects tobacco has on you will outnumber that little dopamine rush ten to one
every time. Smoking, chewing, or even inhaling this substance could lead to a life
of distress and suffering. Tobacco isn’t just for old guys anymore, and it’s
becoming modernized and used in too many ways to the point where it’s
essentially unavoidable.
I agree with your point of view Will. Tobacco definitely has made an impact on our generation especially with e-cigarettes coming in with a 20.8% of usage by high-school students alone. It will most likely take a couple of decades to go by before the world realizes this is bad so this is a very good concept for many high-school students and up to read. Good job Will.
ReplyDeleteWill, I like how even if these tobacco companies are trying to get us, teens to try their product, you still continue to disagree of using tobacco. I also like how you heavily criticize the results on using tobacco. I agree with your stand because I'm starting to see more and more teens and adults using tobacco and their lives are as miserable and depressing as they can be. Also, another reason why I agree with your stand is because Over 16 million Americans are currently living with a tobacco-related disease, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD).
ReplyDeleteI agree with your stand. because tobacco chewables is even chewed by baseball players on the field. and how strong the drug is its unbelievable how easy someone can get there hands on it. and it is so strong that average smokers die 10 years earlier than nonsmokers. this is why I strongly agree with your point with tobacco and how it's slowly killing are population.
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