Smoking-related Disease
Tobacco Products
Contents of a Tobacco Product
Marketing
Other Smoking Effects
100
Smoking is considered directly responsible for 90 percent of deaths from this cause
Lung cancer
100
This tobacco product is the most widely used type in the United States and is produced in varieties such as light, menthol and slims
Cigarettes
100
This chemical in tobacco is responsible for its addictive nature
Nicotine
100
These forms of tobacco advertising were banned in 1971
Radio and television ads
100
This pervasive and lingering effect of smoking can cause a hindrance on a smoker's social life
Odor of smoking (in clothes and hair)
200
This smoking-related disease causes irreversible damage and rupture of the air sacs of the lung and leads to difficulty breathing
Emphysema
200
Smokeless tobacco refers to these two types of products
Snuff (or dip) and chewing tobacco
200
This term describes the contents of tobacco products known to have cancer-causing properties
Carcinogens
200
The use of this banned marketing tool is considered a way that tobacco companies target youth
Use of cartoon characters
200
The yellowing of these features is considered to be a negative effect of smokings
Nails and teeth
300
This form of cancer is associated with all forms of tobacco use but can be connected more commonly to chewing tobacco use
Mouth/oral cancer
300
One of these tobacco products has the same amount of tar, nicotine, and other chemicals as a whole pack of cigarettes
Cigars
300
This term is used to describe chemicals put into tobacco products for purposes such as flavoring, preservation, treatment or packaging
Additives
300
This type of cigarette is generally marketed as appealing to women
Slim cigarettes
300
This sign of addiction occurs when a tobacco user's body needs more nicotine to sustain the effects of use
Physical tolerance
400
The risk of this condition increases if a woman smokes during pregnancy
Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) Also acceptable: asthma
400
This form of smoking involves specially made and flavored tobacco and in one hour a user can inhale 100-200 times the smoke of a single cigarette
Hookah
400
This chemical found in tobacco smoke is also a leading ingredient in rat poison
Arsenic
400
American Spirit and Dorado are examples of this method of targeting diverse populations of smokers
Brand names
400
An average smoker can spend at over $5000 and $200,000 on cigarettes over these two time periods
A year and a lifetime
500
Emphysema and chronic bronchitis are collectively known as this term, symptoms of which include blocked airflow and difficulty breathing
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
500
This message is required by law to be on all forms of tobacco products in the United States
Surgeon General's warning
500
Uranium 325 is a known ingredient of chewing tobacco also used in these products
Nuclear products
500
This product has been advertised as a smoking cessation tool despite a lack of research or regulation
E-cigarettes
500
Tobacco use has been linked to this condition in which thick white patches form inside the mouth and on the tongue, cannot be removed and may be precancerous
Leukoplakia