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Tuesday
Jul312007

Is Smoking Good for Anything?

In the same way one can say “no drug has no side effects” one can probably say “no toxin has no beneficial effect”. Smoking has long been known to cause a huge number of ills – lung cancer, laryngeal cancer, bladder cancer, coronary heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, stroke, macular degeneration, thyroid disease . . .the list goes on. However, there are two conditions where smoking appears to have a beneficial effect.

Ucerative colitis is a distressing inflammatory bowel disease that affects the colon. Smoking appears to be associated with a lessened likelihood of developing ulcerative colitis. But it’s associated with an increased risk of developing Crohn’s disease, the other inflammatory bowel disease that affects the small intestine (its other name is regional ileitis). An apparent paradox.

In 2003 a meta-analysis reported that, c ompared with never having smoked, cigarette smoking reduced the risk of developing Parkinson's disease by roughly half. A new study, reported in the Archives of Neurology, was a more sophisticated analysis of pooled data from11 studies. It showed, conclusively, that there was a dose-dependent reduction of Parkinson’s disease associated with cigarette smoking.

All this doesn’t make it worthwhile for anyone to take up smoking. It merely ponints the wayto using such findings to investigate how diseases come about, and what can influence their occurrence. With luck it may lead to new, innovative medications.

Reader Comments (1)

When I quit smoking I gained 20 pounds even though I didn't eat any more or exercise any less. In fact, I exercised more. I went to the gym 3-5 days a week and walked on my treadmill. I also walk everywhere because I don't have a car. I didn't have room to gain 20 lbs. I have also heard smoking helps reduce Torette's Syndrome. You say it helps these diseases above, but that's no reason to smoke. I'm in a quandary because I have arthritis and each pound I gain is harder and harder on my knees and back. So much so, that I can barely move. Is there any alternative to smoking to help a person lose weight that doesn't have just as bad of side effects and/or cost a lot more?
July 5, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterTottieaizle

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