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Originally published August 29, 2017
Last updated April 23, 2024
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Smoking continues to be the primary cause of the majority of lung cancer cases, but can smoking just one cigarette have an adverse effect on your well-being?
Yes, according to “How Tobacco Smoke Causes Disease,” a 704-page report from the United States Surgeon General’s office. Because tobacco has thousands of addictive chemicals that cause cancer, even a whiff of tobacco can adversely affect the body, the report found.
The following is a time line that illustrates how smoking affects your body.
If you’re a nonsmoker, don’t start. If you smoke regularly or just occasionally, find out if you should get screened for lung cancer.
“It is in any individual’s absolute best interest to never smoke or at least quit smoking, if they are current smokers,” says Anthony W. Kim, MD, division chief of thoracic surgery at Keck Medicine of USC and professor of clinical surgery at the Keck School of Medicine of USC. “There are hundreds of thousands of people who are literally dying from smoking-related diseases and wish that they had the option again to have never started.”
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