Marilyn Pokorney
Do you smoke? Need an incentive to quit? Do you have pets? past that beloved loved just might be the incentive you need to stop.
Researchers at the University of Massachusetts have unconcealed that pets are affected by second-hand smoke.
Cats living with a smoker are cardinal times more promising to get feline lymphoma than cardinal that's not. aft five years the rate increases to three times as likely. When there are two smokers in the home, the chances of a cat getting feline lymphoma increases to four times as likely and after five years, three times the rate of cats living in smokefree homes.
Dogs living in a smoking household have a 60 percent risk of getting lung cancer.
Long-nosed dogs, much as collies or greyhounds, are twice as likely to develop nasal cancer if they liveborn with smokers.
Pets of complete sizes and ages are affected. But especially small pets, the very childly and the old.
Second-hand smoke contributes to a other pet ills as well. As a smoker exhales, the air is filled with toxic fumes.
A pets eyes can become irritated repayable to the smoke's effects on the tiny blood vessels found within the eye.
Smoke can damage the sensitive lungs in a pet. Additionally, the noxious fumes can cause a cold that can lead to much serious, life-threatening conditions.
Smoke inhalation quickly irritates an animal's throat because animals have a shorter esophagus than humans.
Just as smoke affects furniture, rugs, curtains, etc. the smoke also affects a pet's living quarters and gets into the pet's fur and skin. A cats hair continuously traps large quantities of smoke particles just like drapery, furniture and clothing. The cat sniffs and inhales these concentrated particles from his fur while grooming which leads to lymphoma in the nasal passages and intestines as well as the chest.
Some pets are susceptible to smoke.
Animals have a very acute sense of smell and the odor of smoke is precise offensive to them.
Nicotine is a highly cyanogenetic chemical. Some pets may suffer the effects of nicotine poisoning when unprotected to high concentrations.
If a pet has respiratory allergies such as asthma, the illness is going to be worsened by constantly breathing the second hand smoke.
Respiratory illnesses such as asthma, bronchitis, and a collapsing trachea are the most usual possible causes of a chronic cough in dogs. The constant irritation eventually causes the trachea to lose its round open shape. It begins to collapse resulting in even more coughing and irritation, and to an untreatable, intolerable condition usually leading to euthanasia.
So the next time you light up, think of the aerial that your loved pet is being forced to inhale.
Here is more information on helping you to kick the smoky habit:
http://www.apluswriting.net/smoking/smokingpets.htm
Copyright: 2005 Marilyn Pokorney
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