Not a doctor.. but my friend whom I met at kindy-gym/playgroup in a small south coast town, didn't smoke and had two young children..(breast - fed etc...)..she passed away last year at age 37. Now again no doctor...... but really NOT a smoker and a healthy woman.. rip Kylie
You can get lung cancer from one cigarette, unlikely but theres a chance.
So to answer your question, you can most definantly get lung cancer at the age of 30 from smoking.
Tests have shown smoking marijuana does not cause lung cancer.
yes, you can get cancer after smoking.
Yes.
People Mostly get lung cancer by smoking..
Smoking is one cause of lung cancer.
SMOKING
Lung cancer is caused by smoking, so there isn't exactly a yes or no. If you really want a straight-up answer, all smoking does is relax you,while lung cancer kills you while you cough up blood. So yes, lung cancer is worse than being relaxed by smoking.
Both oral cancer and lung cancer are.
Lung cancer occurs when something stimulates cells in the lung or lungs to begin to multiply uncontrollably. The most common cause of lung cancer is smoking, although there are other causes, usually involving inhalation of foreign particles.What causes lung cancer? The biggest cause of lung cancer is smoking, approximately 36,000 people in the U.K. die from lung cancer every year, 90% of those lung cancer deaths are from smoking. If you are a non-smoker there is a risk that you can get lung cancer from passive smoking, though the risk is not as high than if you smoke yourself. Passive smoking could be responsible for several hundred, lung cancer cases every year. Another possible cause of lung cancer is exposure to certain chemicals and substances such as asbestos, radon gas and nickel, but this is very rare. Air pollution has also been suspected as a cause of lung cancer, but this has not been proved.
Smoking is not the only cause of lung cancer.
Lung cancer can be prevented by not smoking or taking in someone else's smoke.
One explanation may be that the smoking caused the lung cancer. It is also possible that smoking and lung cancer are statistically unrelated and that another carcinogen caused the lung cancer. A correlational study must be conducted to determine this.
The cancer society's view on smoking is that smoking causes at least 80% of lung cancer deaths
causes lung cancer
lung cancer!