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Smoking: The sniper in our island of vision

Sankhajyoti Saha, M.Optometry

Clinical Optometrist, I for Eye-Care, Falakata, India

 

The doctor of the future will give no medicine but will instruct his patients in care of the human frame, in diet, and in the cause and prevention of disease.” – Thomas Edison

Tobacco consumption is the leading cause of preventable cancers. Tobacco alone accounts for nearly 5.4 million deaths per year; enough to abolish one billion people in this century at this rate. (1) Owing to increase exposure to environmental tobacco smoke or vapor, health risks are not limited to smokers only, but extend to nonsmokers (especially children) who are exposed to secondhand smoke. Immediately the consequence may seem very minimal, but the ripple effects of small things are precarious.

Cigarette tobacco is a complex physicochemical mixture containing around 7,357 chemical compounds from different classes. Tobacco smoke from cigarette or e-cigarettes is concentrated aerosol consisting mainly of nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, acetaldehyde, methane, hydrogen cyanide, acetone, ammonia, methanol, hydrogen sulfide, hydrocarbons, nitrosamines, and carbonyl compounds, which are suspended in an atmosphere from particles like carboxylic acids, phenols, humectants, nicotine, paraffin, tobacco-specific nitrosamines etc. The tobacco leaf contains many alkaloid chemicals (nicotine is the most copious) which often possess a natural pharmacologic defense against many insects. Nicotine is addictive in humans because a portion of the nicotine molecule is like acetylcholine, which is an important brain neurotransmitter. (2)

Adverse outcomes:

The takeaway:

There is a proverb saying, “Healthy citizens are the greatest asset a country can have.” A potential next step is to initiate clinical guidelines on which eye care practitioners can address their patients about the collision of smoking on eye health, including suitable referral and prevention strategies, to improve quit rates and help discourage people from starting to smoke.

 

References:

  1. WHO Data. Tobacco Fact Sheet; No. 339. Retrieved from:  http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs339/en . (Last accessed: January 30, 2021, 22:00 IST)
  2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (US); National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (US); Office on Smoking and Health (US). How Tobacco Smoke Causes Disease: The Biology and Behavioral Basis for Smoking-Attributable Disease: A Report of the Surgeon General. Atlanta (GA): Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (US); 2010. 3, Chemistry and Toxicology of Cigarette Smoke and Biomarkers of Exposure and Harm. Retrieved from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK53014/ (Last accessed: January 31, 2021, 01:00 IST)
  3. Lohan, S. B., Bühring, K., Lauer, A. C., Friedrich, A., Lademann, J., Buss, A., Sabat, R., Wolk, K., & Meinke, M. C. (2020). Analysis of the Status of the Cutaneous Endogenous and Exogenous Antioxidative System of Smokers and the Short-Term Effect of Defined Smoking Thereon. Antioxidants (Basel, Switzerland)9(6), 537. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox9060537
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