Results 221 to 230 of about 384,417 (265)
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Cigarette Smoking and Addiction
Clinics in Chest Medicine, 1991Tobacco use is a form of drug addiction, as shown by studies assessing the abuse liability of tobacco and nicotine in humans and animals. Tobacco experimentation frequently leads to daily use, which is characterized by a highly consistent pattern of drug intake.
Wallace B. Pickworth+2 more
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Cigarette smoking and hormones
Current Opinion in Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2016Purpose of review The purpose is to provide a summary of the effects of cigarette smoking on steroid hormone metabolism and how it affects female fertility. Recent findings Components of tobacco smoke such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons lead to transcriptional upregulation of a
Adrian Shulman, Lilach Marom-Haham
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Cigarette smoking and psoriasis
Clinics in Dermatology, 1998The prevalence of psoriasis is relatively high in the general population, mainly as a result of its chronicity and the absence of a cure. Psoriasis affects the quality of life to a substantial degree.1 In the First Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (HANES I), conducted in the United States,2 psoriasis ranked, in all but three age groups, as first
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Personality and cigarette smoking
Life Sciences, 1964Abstract An attempt has been made to relate individual differences in the smoking of cigarettes and in over-eating to the personality dimensions of extraversion and neuroticism. It was postulated and has been experimentally confirmed that extraverts indulge in smoking and over-eating to a greater extent than do more introverted people, the ...
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British Journal of Diseases of the Chest, 1980
A survey was performed of smoking habits and respiratory symptoms of 106 asthmatic patients attending a hospital out-patient clinic. A quarter of the patients were currently smokers and a further quarter were ex-smokers. Less than a third of the smokers complained of symptoms of wheeze or dyspnoea after smoking.
T.J.H. Clark+2 more
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A survey was performed of smoking habits and respiratory symptoms of 106 asthmatic patients attending a hospital out-patient clinic. A quarter of the patients were currently smokers and a further quarter were ex-smokers. Less than a third of the smokers complained of symptoms of wheeze or dyspnoea after smoking.
T.J.H. Clark+2 more
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Cigarette Smoke in Research [PDF]
In this issue of the AJRCMB, Kim and colleagues (see article beginning on page 483) demonstrate that cigarette smoke extract (CSE) can cause reversible DNA damage to primary human fetal fibroblasts. The use of crude cigarette smoke extract on cells in culture is, well, crude, and has often been criticized.
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Macrocytosis and Cigarette Smoking
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1973Excerpt To the editor: McPhedran and co-workers report, in "Interpretation of Electronically Determined Macrocytosis" in the May 1973 issue (pp.
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Cigarette smoking and personality
Journal of Chronic Diseases, 1972Abstract Many attempts have been made to discover the ‘smoking personality’. In general, these attempts at best have involved controlling for the major demographic variables, e.g. age, sex and socioeconomic status. However, the resulting groups still must reflect wide individual differences, and no clearcut relationship between smoking and ...
Adrian M. Ostfeld+3 more
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Cigarette Smoke and Ciliastasis
Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal, 1967(1966). Cigarette Smoke and Ciliastasis. Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal: Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 47-50.
C J, Kensler, T, Dalhamn, R, Rylander
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Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal, 1989
Dioxins in cigarettes, smoke, and ash were determined using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The total concentration of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs) in cigarette smoke was approximately 5.0 micrograms/m3 at the maximum level, whereas various congeners from tetra-octa-chlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (-CDD) were detected. Particullary, the total
Y Takizawa, H Muto
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Dioxins in cigarettes, smoke, and ash were determined using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The total concentration of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs) in cigarette smoke was approximately 5.0 micrograms/m3 at the maximum level, whereas various congeners from tetra-octa-chlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (-CDD) were detected. Particullary, the total
Y Takizawa, H Muto
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