Hypnotherapy
helps the way you look by stopping you smoking
Introduction
Tobacco smoking seriously affects internal organs, particularly the heart
and lungs, but it also affects a person’s appearance by altering
the skin and body weight and shape. While these changes are generally
not as life threatening as heart and lung disease, they can, nevertheless,
increase the risk of more serious disorders and have a noticeable ageing
effect on the body.
Smoking and the Skin
The skin is affected by tobacco smoke in at least two ways. Firstly, tobacco
smoke released into the environment has a drying effect on the skin’s
surface. Secondly, because smoking restricts blood vessels, it reduces
the amount of blood flowing to the skin, thus depleting the skin of oxygen
and essential nutrients. Some research suggests that smoking may reduce
the body’s store of Vitamin A, which provides protection against
some skin-damaging agents produced by smoking. Another likely explanation
is that squinting in response to the irritating nature of the smoke, and
the puckering of the mouth when drawing on a cigarette, cause wrinkling
around the eyes and mouth.
Skin damaged by smoke has a greyish, wasted appearance.
Recent research has shown that the skin ageing effects of smoking may
be due to increased production of an enzyme that breaks down collagen
in the skin. Collagen is the main structural protein of the skin which
maintains skin elasticity. The more a person smokes, the greater the risk
of premature wrinkling. Smokers in their 40s often have as many facial
wrinkles as non-smokers in their 60s. In addition to facial wrinkling,
smokers’ may develop hollow cheeks through repeated sucking on cigarettes:
this is particularly noticeable in under-weight smokers and can cause
smokers to look gaunt. 2 A South Korean study of smokers, non-smokers
and ex-smokers aged 20 to 69 found that the current smokers had a higher
degree of facial wrinkling than non-smokers and ex-smokers. Past smokers
who smoked heavily at a younger age revealed less facial wrinkling than
current smokers.
The Chief Medical Officer highlighted the link between smoking and wrinkled,
damaged skin, in his 2003 annual report. The report noted that smokers’
skin can be prematurely aged by between 10 and 20 years and, although
the damaging effects of cigarette smoke on the skin are irreversible,
further deterioration can be avoided by stopping smoking.
Prolonged smoking causes discoloration of the fingers
and fingernails on the hand used to hold cigarettes. Smoking also results
in a yellowing of the teeth and is a cause of halitosis (bad breath).
Stop smoking and prevent
Psoriasis with hypnosis
Compared with non-smokers, smokers have a two to threefold higher risk
of developing psoriasis, a chronic skin condition which, while not life-threatening,
can be extremely uncomfortable and disfiguring. Some studies have found
a dose-response association of smoking and psoriasis, i.e. the risk of
the disease increases the longer a person continues to smoke. Smoking
also appears to be more strongly associated with psoriasis among women
than among men. Smoking may cause as many as one quarter of all psoriasis
cases and may also contribute to as many as half of the cases of palmoplantar
pustulosis, a skin disease involving the hands and feet, that some experts
view as a form of psoriasis.
Stop Smoking and reduce
weight with Hypnotherapy
When people stop smoking, they usually put on weight. Although this is
often a cause for concern, the average weight gain is around 2 to 3 kg
although this may be temporary. Although the reasons for weight gain are
not fully understood, it may be partly explained by the fact that smoking
increases the body's metabolic rate – i.e. the rate at which calories
are burned up. In addition, nicotine may act as an appetite suppressant
so that when smokers quit an increase in appetite leads to an increase
in calorie intake. The effect of nicotine on metabolic rate may also explain
why smokers tend to weigh less than non-smokers. Experts believe that
one way smoking raises metabolic rate is by stimulating the nervous system
to produce catecholamines – hormones which cause the heart to beat
faster, thus making the body burn more calories. Nicotine also produces
more thermogenesis, the process by which the body produces heat. This
too, causes the body to use up more calories.
However, a smoking-induced increase in metabolic rate
only accounts for about half the difference in weight between the average
smoker and average non-smoker. Another likely mechanism is that smoking
alters the body-weight set point, i.e. the weight towards which a person
tends to return despite attempts to gain or lose weight. Smoking appears
to lower a person’s normal weight and the weight gained on stopping
reflects a return to the body’s natural weight set point.
Women and girls tend to be more concerned about their
weight and body shape than men, and weight control may be influential
in causing the higher incidence of smoking among teenage girls. However,
post-cessation weight gain can be modified by eating a low-fat, calorie-reduced
diet and by moderately increased exercise. One study found that stopping
smoking resulted in a net excess weight gain of about 2.4 kg in middle-aged
women but that among those women who increased physical activity after
stopping smoking, weight gain was between 1.3 kg and 1.8kg.
While weight gain is common immediately after stopping smoking, in the
longer term, ex-smokers weight may return to the comparative weight of
someone who has never smoked. A Japanese study examined the relationship
between weight gain and the length of time after stopping smoking. Researchers
found that although heavy smokers experienced large weight gain and weighed
more than never smokers in the few years after smoking cessation, thereafter
they lost weight to the never smoker level. Among former light and moderate
smokers, weight was gained up to the never-smoker level but without any
further excess gain.
Reduce your body shape when you stop smoking
with hypnotherapy
Although smokers tend to be thinner than non-smokers, the effect of smoking
on the endocrine system (glands which secrete hormones) causes smokers
to store even normal amounts of body fat in an abnormal distribution.
Smokers are more likely to store fat around the waist and upper torso,
rather than around the hips. This means smokers are more likely to have
a higher waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) than non-smokers. A high WHR is associated
with a much higher risk of developing diabetes, heart disease, high blood
pressure, gallbladder problems and (in women) cancer of the womb and breast.
In one study of nearly 12,000 pre- and postmenopausal women aged 40 to
73, the waist to hip ratio increased as the number of cigarettes smoked
per day increased. 2 A study of American men also found a dose-response
relationship between the number of cigarettes smoked and waist-to-hip
ratio.
However, changes to WHR induced by smoking need not be permanent. A Swedish
study examined the effect of smoking and smoking cessation on the distribution
of fat in a representative sample of women. The study found that women
who stopped smoking experienced less upper-body fat deposition than would
be expected by their accompanying weight gain. This suggests that while
some weight gain after stopping smoking can be expected, it is less of
a health risk because it is not deposited in the upper torso, where it
is associated with increased risk of heart disease.
Unless otherwise stated, the above information is taken from: http://www.ash.org.uk
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