This is because when the cigarette’s
smoke is inhaled, it passes quickly into the lungs and into
the brain, stimulating the hypothalamus and the pituitary glands,
which at the same time creates a need that does that the smoker
keeps on absorbing nicotine. Although the organism has its
own defense mechanisms that are cleaning it constantly, a moment
arrives in which the nicotine damages the vivratiles cilia
of the bronchial tubes, affecting the lungs’ “cleaning” system,
doing that the elimination turns increasingly more difficult.
Immediately after the absorption, the nicotine is going to
produce an activation of the adrenalin glands that at the same
time produces corporal stimulation and fast discharge of glucose,
increase of the arterial pressure and of the heart rhythm.
|