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Alcohol cuts risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis

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People who drink alcohol are less prone to the sometimes crippling disease called rheumatoid arthritis compared with non-drinkers, according to a Scandinavian study published on Wednesday.

People who had a moderate alcohol consumption were 40 and 45 percent less likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis compared with people who did not drink or drank only occasionally, it found.

Among those who had a high consumption, the risk was reduced by 50 and 55 percent respectively.

Most surprising was that the biggest benefits were seen among smokers with a genetic profile known to make them vulnerable to the disease.

Rheumatoid arthritis affects between 0.5 and one percent of people, according to figures for the industrialised world.

It happens when the immune system attacks the joints, causing inflammation and damage to the cartilage and bone.

A mixture of environmental factors, especially smoking, and genetic heritage are the deemed causes of the disease.

The authors, led by Henrik Kaellberg of the Institute of Environmental Medicine at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, note previous research that suggests alcohol interferes with inflammatory processes that trigger heart disease.

Doctors advising patients about the disease say they should urge smokers to kick tobacco, but not necessarily to stop consumption of alcohol in moderate quantities.

High consumption of alcohol, while apparently protective for rheumatoid arthritis, is itself linked with many other health problems.

The paper appears in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, a specialist journal published by the British Medical Association (BMA).
 

Tapir Caper

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smoking has health benefits too, i kid you not. it's related to lower incidence of a number of diseases, including parkinson's.
 

Tapir Caper

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[article]

I am a smoker. I smoke about a pack a day. I am 50 now, and have been smoking for almost 30 years. I have also fought and won many forms of cancer... but I have never had any of the types of cancer that have been deemed smoking related. Having shown my apparent bias, I will say that my stance on smoking is somewhat neutral. Smoking does not cause cancer, but it is a major contributing factor in those people born with a genetic predisposition to cancer. Sometimes... Lung cancer is of course the biggy here, with throat cancer up in the top of the list of smoking related cancers. But did you know that smoking actually cuts down on other kinds of cancer? Well, it does. Smoking can be beneficial to your health. So yes, neutral: Some good, some bad in the act of smoking.

First off, get off the talking point you've been fed about second hand smoke, alright? I mean it doesn't even make freakin' sense, folks. There always people in society who, if they don' like a thing themselves, decide that they are going to force everyone else to live like them. I hate those people. I'll tell you how I think this whole second hand smoke campaign came about: It is very simple, actually.

You have a holier than thou clan running around screaming about smoking and cancer this, smoking and cancer that... then someone pipes up and says "ummm ok but how come people who don't smoke die from cancer more often than smokers?" Insert a bit of hemming and hawing along with a bit of fidgeting here. Then comes the brainstorm: "Well! It must be second-hand smoke... and it must be even more dangerous than smoking!"

When my kid got fed that line at school one day, she came home just livid at me for endangering her life. I handed her a cigarette. She stared at me in horror. I calmly told her that if it is true that second hand smoke is more dangerous than smoking, then I would be happy to save her life and give her a pack. I called her bluff. I knew she was a smart kid. It took her all of about 30 seconds to figure it out. The line she was being fed made no sense at all. (And no, she did not start smoking)
But I promised you some benefits to nicotine and smoking. All of these are supported by rigid testing, but pretty much buried by the Powers That Be for a number of reasons. The governments of the world make a great deal of money from those high cigarette taxes, they are not going to give on that without a behind the scenes fight. Here they are, with sources listed at the end of the article...

"A review of 61 studies suggests that smokers have a 60% lower risk of Parkinson's disease." Sixty percent! That is pretty damned significant, no? "Parkinsons is a nerve disease aggravated by dopamine shortages. Smokers have about 40% less of the enzyme that breaks down dopamine, so they have more dopamine."

"University of South Florida studied 70 young Tourette's syndrome patients and found significant increases in the control of muscle tics and verbal outbursts associated with the disease when using nicotine." Same with Alzheimers. Smoking slows the effect of alzheimers in patients who already have it, and smokers are way less likely to get it to begin with.

Add Schizophrenia, ADD, OCD, Sleep Apnea, and Colitis to the list of diseases which are benefited by nicotine use. "Smoking may actually help decrease the side effects of antipsychotic medication" (although, to be fair, it can also cause a bad reaction.. so tell your Shrink that you smoke before taking any antipsychotic meds.)

"Cigarettes boost DHEA which is a sex hormone that increases libido and helps trim your weight." Smoking also boosts memory functions. Gee... better sex, less weight, and less air-headeness? That's what I'm talkin' about...

"Stanford researchers have discovered that low doses of nicotine, a major component of cigarette smoke, appear to promote new blood vessel growth" - which is very beneficial for folks who have just suffered a heart attack or stroke.

Smokers are actually at lower risk from gum disease. "There was severe gum recession of more than two millimetres in more than three times as many non-smokers (23 percent) as among smokers (7 percent)."

"In a multivariate analysis, children of mothers who smoked at least 15 cigarettes a day tended to have lower odds for suffering from allergic rhino-conjunctivitis, allergic asthma, atopic eczema and food allergy, compared to children of mothers who had never smoked (ORs 0.6-0.7). Children of fathers who had smoked at least 15 cigarettes a day had a similar tendency (ORs 0.7-0.9)." - This from a recent study in Sweden. Did you hear that? Lower incidence in asthma in children of parents who smoke...

You want the Cancers? Here are a few of the cancers which show a significantly lower occurance in smokers than in non-smokers:

Endometrial Cancer: Smoking was found to reduce the risk of estrogen-dependent endometrial cancer.

Skin Cancers: Dr. James Goedert of the by-gawd National Cancer Institute stated publicly that "smoking may act as a preventative for developing a skin cancer that primarily afflicts elderly men in Mediterranean regions of Southern Italy, Greece and Israel."

Breast Cancer: Females Smokers were found to have a statistically significant (54 percent!) decrease in breast cancer when compared with women who never smoked.

Colon Cancer

Prostate Cancer

Thyroid Cancer in Women: Having ever smoked 100 cigarettes or more was shown to reduce the risk significantly of this cancer, and current smokers showed the most reduction as compared to women who had never smoked.

And I just told you about the easy stuff to find... If you want more, go buy the book "The Health Benefits of Tobacco: A Smoker's Paradox" by Dr. William Douglass. You can find it on Amazon. There has been a huge smear campaign to try to shut him up, but he has fact & figures... which he balances with risks. He'll explain the studies on Colon and Prostate cancers to you.

Look. All I'm saying here is that you cannot buy cute Slogans as the whole truth and nothing but the truth. Cigarettes are not a miracle drug, and I did not intend to paint them as such. I said in the opening that yes, they are a contributing factor in some cancers in people who are prone to those types of cancers... but you cannot just blindly follow the trend and make blanket statements that cigarettes are evil, either. I know both sides of the issue. I've taken the time to research both the health risks and the health benefits of smoking. Have you?

"An image makeover for nicotine: It shows promise against brain diseases", HealthCentral.com - Feb. 21, 2000
"A Little Nicotine Could Be Good For You," Medicine,' Newsweek, Mar. 6, 2000
"Nicotine's Nice Side," Abigail Trafford, Washington Post Health, Apr. 22, 1997
Family Doctor, Alan E. Nourse, MD, Good Housekeeping, Apr. 1992
The Wall Street Journal, 1995
Reuters Health, HealthCentral - Aug. 2000
http://www.jrussellshealth.com/smokbens.html
Tobacco Control News, American Cancer Society, Apr. 1996
"Nicotine may be good for you," Prevention magazine, Dec. 1999
http://www.data-yard.net/10o/gums.htm
http://www.data-yard.net/30/asthma.htm -
Journal of the National Cancer Institute (May 20, 1998)
http://www.forces.org/evidence/evid/therap.htm
.... and many more

http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/296834/what_they_wont_tell_you_smoking_has.html
 
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Tapir Caper

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Thank You for Smoking

By Peter Brimelow (nonsmoker, but tolerant)

THE HANGPERSON'S NOOSE is unmistakably around the tobacco industry's neck. In Florida and Mississippi, state governments are attempting to force tobacco companies to pay some smoking-related health care costs. In Washington, D.C., the Environmental Protection Agency has claimed that "secondhand smoke" is a significant risk for nonsmokers and the Food & Drug Administration is making noises about regulating nicotine as a drug. And recently the American Medical Association agreed, reasserting that nicotine is addictive. Smokers have already been driven away from many workplaces into the street for a furtive puff. But further legal harassment, to the point of what an industry spokesman calls "backdoor prohibition," seems unstoppable.

Lost in this lynching frenzy: the fact that smoking might be, in some small ways, good for you.

Hold on now! Let's be clear: The Surgeon General has indeed determined that smoking is dangerous to your health. Lung cancer and cardiovascular diseases are highly correlated with cigarette consumption. Annual smoking-related deaths are commonly said to be over 400,000 (although critics say the number is inflated).

But so is driving automobiles dangerous to your health (over 40,000 deaths a year). Yet people do it, because it has rewards as well as risk. And they judge, as individuals, that the reward outweighs the risk.

This is called freedom.

Well, what are the rewards of cigarette smoking? Apart from intangible pleasure, the most obvious is behavioral. A battery of studies, such as those by British researcher D.M. Warburton, show that cigarettes, whatever their other effects, really do stimulate alertness, dexterity and cognitive capacity.

And alertness, dexterity, etc., can be useful. Such as when driving. Or flying-as Congress recognized when it exempted airline pilots from the ban on smoking on domestic flights.

These behavioral benefits suggest an answer to the Great Tobacco Mystery: why almost a third of adult Americans continue to do something they are told, incessantly and insistently, is bad for them. (Duke University economist W. Kip Viscusi reported in his 1992 book, Smoking: Making the Risky Decision, that survey data show smokers, if anything, exaggerate the health danger of their habit).

Smokers, according to numerous studies such as those by University of Michigan researchers Ovide and Cynthia Pomerleau, are different from nonsmokers. They tend toward depression and excitability. Current understanding is that nicotine is "amphoteric" that is, it can act to counter both conditions, depending on how it is consumed. (Quick puffs stimulate, long drags calm.)

The implication is fascinating. A large part of the population seems to be aware of its significant although not pathological personality quirks, and to have discovered a form of self-edication that regulates them.

Of course, this explanation for the stubbornness of smokers is not as satisfying as what Washington prefers to believe: mass seduction by the wicked tobacco companies and their irresistible advertising. Nor would it justify huge rescue operations by heroic politicians and bureaucrats.

Beyond its behavioral effects, smoking seems also to offer subtler health rewards to balance against its undisputed risks:

Parkinson's disease. The frequency of this degenerative disorder of the nervous system among smokers appears to be half the rate among nonsmokers ? an effect recognized by the Surgeon General as along ago as 1964.

Alzheimer's disease. Similarly, the frequency of this degenerative mental disorder has recently been found to be as much as 50%less among smokers than among nonsmokers for example, by the H studies reviewed in the International Journal of Epidemiology in 1991.

Endometrial cancer. There is extensive and long-standing evidence that this disease of the womb occurs as much as 50% less among smokers as documented by, for example, a New England Journal of Medicine article back in 1985. The triggering mechanism appears to be a reduction on estrogen levels.

Prostate cancer. Conversely, smoking seems to raise estrogen levels in men and may be responsible for what appears to be a 50% lower rate of prostate cancer among smokers, although this needs corroboration.

Osteoarthritis. This degenerative disorder of bone and cartilage is up to five times less likely to occur among heavy smokers as documented, for example, by the federal government's first Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

Colon cancer, ulcerative colitis These diseases of the bowel seem to be about 30% and 50% less frequent among smokers documented, for example, by articles in the Journal of the American Medical Association and in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1981 and 1983, respectively.

Other benefits that have been suggested for smoking: Lower rates of sarcoidosis and allergic alveolitis, both lung disorders, and possibly even acne. Smokers are also lighter ironically, because obesity is a leading cause of the cardiovascular disease that smoking is also supposed to exacerbate. So you could quit smoking and still die of a heart attack because of the weight you put on.

None of these health benefits is enough to persuade doctors to recommend occasional cigarettes, in the way that some now occasionally recommend a glass of wine.

But consider this theoretical possibility: Should 60 year olds take up smoking because its protection against Alzheimer's is more immediate that its potential damage to the lungs, which won't show up for 30 years if at all?

A theoretical possibility and likely to remain theoretical. Research into possible benefits of tobacco and nicotine is widely reported to be stymied by the absolutist moral fervor of the antismoking campaign.

Under the Carter Administration, the federal government abandoned its research into safer cigarettes in favor of an attack on all smoking. No effort is made to encourage smokers to switch to pipes and cigars, although their users' lung cancer and heart disease rates are five to ten times lower (somewhat offset by minor increases in mouth and throat cancers). There is no current support for studies of the marginal increase in danger for each cigarette smoked, although it appears the human system can clear the effects of three to five of the (much stronger) pre-1960 cigarettes, if dispersed across a day, with relatively little risk.

Instead, the extirpation of smoking had become another "moral equivalent of war" as President Carter called the energy crisis in the 1970s, and as price and wage controls were viewed earlier. There is no role for tradeoffs, risk-reward calculations or free choice.

Why don't tobacco companies point out the potential offsetting rewards of smoking? Besides the usual corporate cowardice and bureaucratic inertia, the answer may be another, typically American, disease lawyers. Directing the companies' defense, they apparently veto any suggestion that smoking has benefits for fear of liability suits and of the possible regulatory implications if nicotine is seen as a drug.

Which leaves smokers defenseless against a second typically American disease: the epidemic of power hungry puritanical bigots.

Forbes, July 4, 1994

http://www.vdare.com/pb/smoking.htm
 
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