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cancer
Smoking cigarettes, cigars, or other tobacco products can have harmful effects on your lungs and respiratory system. Here are some of the ways smoking affects your lungs: Chronic bronchitis: Smoking irritates and inflames the bronchial tubes in your lungs, leading to chronic bronchitis. This condition causes coughing, difficulty breathing, and excess mucus production. Emphysema: Smoking damages the air sacs in your lungs, making it difficult for them to expand and contract properly. This leads to shortness of breath and a feeling of being constantly out of breath. Lung cancer: Smoking is the leading cause of lung cancer. It can damage the DNA in your lung cells, causing them to grow and divide uncontrollably. Decreased lung function: Smoking reduces your lung function and can lead to a range of respiratory problems, including asthma, pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Tobacco is made from the dried leaves of the tobacco plant, which contains the addictive drug nicotine as well as many other chemicals. When tobacco is burned, it produces a range of harmful chemicals, including tar, carbon monoxide, and hydrogen cyanide. These chemicals are inhaled into the lungs when you smoke or use other tobacco products, where they can cause damage to your respiratory system and other parts of your body.
These chemicals are called CYTOKINES.
You can divide the word "disease" into two syllables: dis-ease. The first syllable is "dis" and the second syllable is "ease."
Dis•ease
Cancerous Cells
Cancer.
interior lowlands
I believe that is when tumors form and you get cancer, not sure though
It is called the Rocky Mountains(rockies)
Opinion only:Chemotherapy is the treatment of disease by chemicals that kill cells, both good and bad, but specifically those of microorganisms or cancer that divide rapidly. This means that other fast-dividing cells, such as those responsible for hair growth will be adversely affected by chemotherapy treatment as well.Chemotherapy is also used for the treatment of diseases such as multiple sclerosis; Hodgkin's disease; rheumatoid arthritis as well as the suppression of transplant rejections.
In humans, this cellular behavior is called "cancer"