Holy smoke! Cigarettes can make men bald..
"The findings are not surprising. It's well established that smoking causes the blood vessels to constrict, lowering the supply of oxygen and nutrients to the heart. Here, too, the hair follicles are being deprived of oxygen and nutrition," says Dr R.R. Kasliwal, senior consultant cardiologist, Apollo Hospital. Scientists studied 740 Taiwanese men with an average age of 65. After gathering information about the age at which they started losing their hair, their smoking history and their height and weight, as well as taking blood samples, they found cigarettes led to significantly more hair loss even after taking other factors into account. "After controlling for age and family history, statistically significant positive associations were noted between moderate or severe palepattern baldness and smoking status," said Dr Lin-hui Su of the Far Eastern Memorial Hospital in Taiwan.
Cigarette smoke contains over 4,800 chemicals, 69 of which are known to cause cancer. Apart from cancer, smoking is also a major risk factor in chronic bronchitis, heart disease and stroke, and other disorders such as slowed healing of wounds, impotence, infertility and peptic ulcer disease. Tobacco is the second biggest cause of death in the world, according to the World Health Organisation. It currently kills about 5 million people - one in 10 adult deaths - each year globally Half the people that smoke or consume . Tobacco in other forms today - about 650 million people - will eventually be killed by their habit, says the WHO.
According to the Indian Council of Medical Research, tobacco use is responsible for over 10 lakh deaths each year - about 2,800 people every day Some 250 million people use tobacco in some . form or the other. Apart from the smoked forms (cigarettes, bidis and cigars), several smokeless forms of consumption exist and they account for 40 per cent of the total tobacco consumption. 250 mn tobacco users in India 16% of them are cigarette smokers 44% smoke bidis 40% have gutka, mishri (roasted black tobacco powder applied to gums) and chewing tobacco in betel-quid.
image and article source:hindustantimes.com
Labels: baldness, cigarettes, dermatology, hair loss, harmful diseases, heart attack, impotence, Indian Council of Medical Research, lung disease, smoking, tobacco, WHO
