The average life expectancy for non-smokers over smokers is about 14 years. However, this is an average. Some will live longer, some less time. Still, they're odds to consider carefully.
There is no direct or immediate answer to this question, usually if they are smokers they are more withdrawn from school, tend to smell like smoke, and wear much perfume/ cologne. THESE ARE NOT FOR SURE SYMPTOMS, if a teen has all three of these they can still be not smokers, it depends on the teen. Get to know them and the answer will soon be uncovered...
In easy terms, your lungs get full of tar and junk, so when you breathe in not as much oxygen is able to get through the little capillaries in your lungs and into your blood stream. Think of your lungs as being like a clogged sink.
about 1000 years
Male smokers who quit at 35 years old can be expected to live to be 76 years old instead of 69 years if they were still smoking. Women who quit would live to be 80 years old instead of 74 years.
A black smoker is a underwater vent pipe that vents very hot magma-heated saltwater and it grows in height to as much as 20 feet. Even at high temperatures crabs and shrimp live on these smokers.
Cardiopulmonary refers to the relationship between the heart and lungs. In smokers, your heart and lungs work much less efficiently than those of non-smokers. The likelihood of developing heart and lung diseases is much higher in smokers than in non-smokers.
Bettas only live a couple of years.
alot
Yes and much happier
Yes, Male cougars live much longer than female cougars, usually 2 to 3 years longer.
Yes. Some live much longer than that.
Smoking increases the risk of infection and the epidemiology of smoking related infection, and delineated implications of this increased risk of infection among cigarette smokers. Cigarette smoking is a substantial risk factor for important bacterial and viral infections. For example, smokers incur a 2 to 4 fold increased risk of invasive pneumatically disease. Influenza risk is several fold higher and is much more severe in smokers than nonsmokers. Perhaps the greatest public health impact of smoking on infection is the increased risk of tuberculosis, a particular problem in underdeveloped countries where smoking rates are increasing rapidly.