While cigarette smoking is the most common lung cancer risk factor, about 15 percent of lung cancer diagnoses occur in people who have never smoked.
Smoking can affect your eye health. Learn how cigarettes cause vision loss through cataracts, macular degeneration, and other eye health problems.
How a 10-cigarettes-a-day smoker put out her 15-year habit for good.
Chest pain is the most obvious sign of lung cancer, but there are plenty of other signals you should know about—even if you've never smoked. Lung cancer is the leading cancer killer of both men and women in the US, and up to 20% of people who die from it have never smoked at all.
Cigarettes smoking causes lung, throat and larynx cancers–which makes sense because those tissues come directly into contact with smoke and cancer-causing chemicals. But how can smoking affect something as distant from the respiratory organs as the colon, bladder and pancreas?
Smoking is an addiction that negatively affect your health. Quit smoking to reduce your risk for heart disease.
Learn about the benefits of quitting smoking, like improved heart and lung health, as well as resources to stop smoking and live a healthier lifestyle.
If you've been a lifelong smoker, you might be thinking, Why quit now when the damage is already done? But a recent study finds that even the oldest smokers can reap significant benefits from kicking the habit.
It has more to do with healthcare than lung cancer
Your Facebook friends and Twitter followers can be a vital support system while kicking the habit.
Current and former smokers have 25 times the risk of developing lung cancer compared to non-smokers.
The ad campaign comes after years of legal battles.
Critics say World Health Organisation report is a backward step that will hamper fight to cut tobacco-related deaths
The relationship between smoking and sight loss is as strong as the link between smoking and lung cancer, say charity Eye Health UK.
If you’re looking for yet another good reason to quit smoking, recent research suggests it’s not just your lungs, skin, and heart you need to worry about. In a 28-year study of 811 male smokers and non-smokers, current and former smokers had nearly double the number of teeth requiring root canal treatment than those who never smoked. The men were between the ages of 21 and 81, and were examined every three years during the study. So, why the big difference between smokers…
It is a common misconception that only people who smoked are at risk for lung cancer. The truth is there are a variety of things that can cause damage to your lungs and may eventually lead to lung cancer. In fact, the second leading cause of lung cancer in the U.S., responsible for an estimated 21,000 related lung cancer deaths each year, has nothing to do with tobacco but is instead a toxic gas in the air.
You may think that lung cancer is an issue for smokers only—and for the most part, that’s correct. The American Cancer Society reports that 80 to 90 percent of all lung cancer cases are related to smoking tobacco. Yet “never-smokers”—people who have smoked less than 100 cigarettes in their lifetime—aren’t immune from the disease. Dana [...]
Once we pass the age of 30 our lung function begins to decline. Eating the right foods can help slow this process, even if you once smoked.
When something is off with your lungs, it can signify that something serious is going on. It’s important to pay attention to these signs, as early detection can go a long way in helping to manage and treat conditions like lung disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and lung cancer—the leading cancer killer of men [...]