Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Because women more hits the lung cancer?

Lung cancer kills more women each year, breast cancer. In fact, lung cancer is the second leading cause of death among men and women with statistics that show which is a major issue, particularly for women have proven a predisposition to the development of lung cancer.

However, lung cancer poses additional problems and risks for women, these can be generalized significantly and that has to do with smoke.

Approximately 90% of deaths from lung cancer among women are as a direct result of smoking or inhaling secondhand smoke from another person. (This is known as passive smoking).

Although research has shown because smoking a wide range of serious damage to health, 1 every five women in the United States and other Western countries still smoke with this number regularly worrying increase every year, despite the wide publicity to show how dangerous it is.

They completed the research indicates that women who are former smokers still may have a significantly higher risk for developing cancer of the lungs even 20 years after quitting smoking. However, it is fair to say that once you stop smoking, reduce the overall risk of lung cancer.

According to an article in the journal of Clinical Oncology in 2005: female smokers are more likely than male smokers to develop lung cancer, women who have never smoked are more likely to develop lung cancer have never smoked.

These differences are due to differences hereditary metabolic and hormonal, between the sexes.

Female smokers are 13 times more likely to die of women who have never smoked and female former smokers are 5 times more likely to die lung cancer than women who have never smoked lung cancer.

Women, even though she has never smoked, should be aware of their risk. Due to high risks that smoking causes lung cancer and other serious illnesses, particularly female smokers should reflect carefully on the verge of going soon and despite the past history of smoke are more likely to lung cancer, at least the overall risk decreases after you quit.

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