Cigars and Oral Health
With the increased popularity of
cigar smoking as an alternative to cigarette smoking, due to the
publicity campaigns, media exposure, movie- star attraction, and
star athletes who smoke cigars, there has been an increase in
teens and young adults who smoke cigars. Cigar smoking is not a
safe alternative to cigarettes as many believe. The ADA even warns
that even occasional cigar smoking may pose serious health risks.
The increased risk includes tooth and jawbone loss. There is also
an increased risk for cancer in the throat and mouth. Risk of lung
cancer and heart attack may be the same as that of cigarette
smokers. Cigar smokers also suffer from excessive tooth stain and
chronic halitosis (bad breath). With the increased media hype, it
is important to warn cigar smokers of the possible end results.
Cigar smokers face about twice the
risk of cancer of the mouth, throat, or lung as nonsmokers, and
about one and a half times the risk of developing any
smoking-related cancer, according to a report published in the
June 10th issue of The New England Journal of Medicine.
The study conducted by Dr. Carlos
Iribarren and his team from Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program
in Oakland, California also stated that alcohol consumption in
addition to cigar smoking pushed some of these risks even higher.
Cigar smokers who had three or more drinks per day faced a risk of
mouth and throat cancer nearly eight times that of nonsmokers who
drink two or fewer drinks per day.
return
to men's health
|