Search Results 31-40 of 28621 for smoking
Like most smokers, you've probably made at least one serious attempt to stop. But it's rare to stop smoking on your first attempt — especially if you try to do ...
Smoking may increase the risk of diabetes because it can increase blood sugar levels. It also affects the body's ability to respond to its own insulin — a ...
Quit-smoking basics. Tobacco is a killer. People who smoke or use other forms of tobacco are more likely to develop disease and die earlier than are people who ...
Learn about an effective residential smoking cessation program at Mayo Clinic's nicotine rehab center in Minnesota, including sessions on smoking relapse.
Smokers' Brains Change in Response to High Levels of Nicotine. February 24, 2012. Dear Mayo Clinic: Is it true that smoking changes your brain somehow, making ...
"Smoking makes you more susceptible to COVID-19, because it destroys some of your lung's natural defense mechanisms," says Dr. Patel. "Vaping may do the same ...
Although the disease can occur in people who have never smoked, people who smoke or have smoked have the greatest risk of lung cancer. Quitting smoking is one ...
Secondhand smoke contains the same toxic chemicals that are inhaled by smokers, including nicotine, carbon monoxide, benzene, formaldehyde, cyanide and a ...
“Cigarette smoke affects every organ system in the body. We've known for a long time that cigarette smokers have a larger number of polyps of the colon, which ...
Any amount of secondhand smoke is bad for the heart and blood vessels. Breathing secondhand smoke can cause the cells in the blood that are responsible for ...
Mayo Clinic does not endorse companies or products. Advertising revenue supports our not-for-profit mission.
Check out these best-sellers and special offers on books and newsletters from Mayo Clinic Press.
Make a gift now and help create new and better solutions for more than 1.3 million patients who turn to Mayo Clinic each year.