Lung Cancer | Causes of the Disease
Lung Cancer….learn what causes it.
Although there are many risk factors associated with lung cancer, the most common include: cigarette smoking,
secondhand smoke, asbestos exposure and radon gas.
The following paragraphs will take a brief look at each of these factors.
Cigarette smoking is most commonly associated with lung cancer.
Studies have shown that a person who smokes 1-2 packs of cigarette in a day can have a one in seven chance of
getting lung cancer.
A person who smokes 1 cigarette to 1 pack of cigarettes a day has approximately a 25 percent greater risk of
developing lung cancer than non-smokers. A person who smokes cigars, or a pipe, has a five times greater chance of
getting lung cancer than a non-smoker.
The chance of developing lung cancer increases dramatically with the number of cigarettes smoked over a
period of a lifetime.
Cigarette smoking damages the cells in your lungs, but the minute you stop smoking, your lungs begin to
heal themselves.
Our lungs can replace cells damaged by smoking with normal, healthy cells. The risk of lung cancer begins to
decrease almost immediately after a person quits smoking.
By the 15th year of being smoke free, the risk of lung cancer is about equal to that of a non-smoker.
Second hand smoke also plays a huge role in factoring who will develop lung cancer.
People exposed to regular second hand smoke also have a higher risk of getting lung cancer, even if they do not
smoke cigarettes.
Research studies have shown that non-smokers who live with smokers have a 24 percent higher risk of developing
lung cancer than non-smokers.
Doctors estimate that approximately 3,000 deaths due to lung cancer a year can be attributed to second hand
smoke exposure.
Asbestos exposure is another well known cause for lung cancer and mesothelioma.
Years ago, asbestos was widely accepted and used in construction, as well as in everyday products. Asbestos
separates into fine silica fibers that become trapped in the tissues of the lungs.
Mesothelioma is exclusively linked to asbestos exposure, as there are no reported cases that
can be linked to anyone who has not been exposed to asbestos.
A non-smoker who has been exposed to asbestos has approximately five times greater risk of developing lung
cancer than a non-smoker that has not been exposed to asbestos. Smoking can increase these risks from 50 to 90
percent.
Finally, it is estimated that approximately 12 percent of all lung cancer deaths can be associated with radon
gas.
Radon gas is an odorless, colorless gas that is a natural byproduct of decaying uranium. It is estimated that as
many as 15 percent of all homes in the United States have unsafe levels of radon gas, which can then account for
15,000 - 22,000 deaths from lung cancer each year.
Our next article is about Nutrition associated with lung cancer.
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