How are your toenails?

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  • snusgetter
    Member
    • May 2010
    • 10903

    How are your toenails?

    ~
    Toenails may hold clue to lung cancer risk

    Your toenails may hold clues to your risk of developing lung cancer, a new study finds.

    The results show men with high levels of nicotine in their toenails were about 3.5 times more likely to develop lung cancer than those with lower levels of nicotine, regardless of their smoking histories.

    The findings suggest the detrimental effects of smoking may be underestimated in studies that use only self-reported smoking history to assess lung cancer risk, the researchers said.

    Studies that only ask people how much they smoke might misjudge the amount of nicotine people actually inhale — either because people fudge a little when they answer, or because some may smoke fewer cigarettes than others but inhale more deeply, taking in more tobacco carcinogens.

    To find an indicator of tobacco exposure that would be less prone to error, study researcher Wael Al-Delaimy of the University of California, San Diego, and colleagues turned to toenails. Because toenails grow slowly, nicotine levels in toenail clippings are relatively stable compared to levels in our salvia and urine.

    The study involved men who had answered a health questionnaire in 1986, and were followed up every two years. In 1987, 33,737 men provided toenail clippings.

    Of these, 210 men developed lung cancer between 1988 and 2000. The researchers compared the toenail clippings of this group to those 630 men who did not develop lung cancer.

    The clippings were used to assess the men's tobacco exposure over the last year.

    Not surprisingly, participants' smoking history predicted their lung cancer risk.

    The nicotine levels in toenail clippings predicted the men's risk of developing lung cancer, regardless of how much participants said they had smoked in the past, and whether they were currently smoking. In fact, the researchers found more than 10 percent of men who had the highest levels of nicotine in their toenail clippings had never smoked.

    The findings suggest that "previous studies that have determined risk of lung cancer from tobacco use by using only reported active smoking may have underestimated the true effects of tobacco smoke," the study said. The researchers noted that nicotine is not a carcinogen, but the findings are based on the assumption that higher levels of nicotine correspond to higher levels of exposure to carcinogens in tobacco.

    Nicotine levels could serve as a possible biomarker for exposure to tobacco, and letting someone know their levels might motivate them to quit smoking, or avoid heavy exposure to secondhand smoke, the researchers said.


    The work was published online March 2 in the American Journal of Epidemiology.



    Gotta wonder how smokeless tobacco products fit into the equation.
  • Premium Parrots
    Super Moderators
    • Feb 2008
    • 9758

    #2
    Originally posted by snusgetter View Post
    ~
    Toenails may hold clue to lung cancer risk

    Your toenails may hold clues to your risk of developing lung cancer, a new study finds.

    The results show men with high levels of nicotine in their toenails were about 3.5 times more likely to develop lung cancer than those with lower levels of nicotine, regardless of their smoking histories.

    The findings suggest the detrimental effects of smoking may be underestimated in studies that use only self-reported smoking history to assess lung cancer risk, the researchers said.

    Studies that only ask people how much they smoke might misjudge the amount of nicotine people actually inhale — either because people fudge a little when they answer, or because some may smoke fewer cigarettes than others but inhale more deeply, taking in more tobacco carcinogens.

    To find an indicator of tobacco exposure that would be less prone to error, study researcher Wael Al-Delaimy of the University of California, San Diego, and colleagues turned to toenails. Because toenails grow slowly, nicotine levels in toenail clippings are relatively stable compared to levels in our salvia and urine.

    The study involved men who had answered a health questionnaire in 1986, and were followed up every two years. In 1987, 33,737 men provided toenail clippings.

    Of these, 210 men developed lung cancer between 1988 and 2000. The researchers compared the toenail clippings of this group to those 630 men who did not develop lung cancer.

    The clippings were used to assess the men's tobacco exposure over the last year.

    Not surprisingly, participants' smoking history predicted their lung cancer risk.

    The nicotine levels in toenail clippings predicted the men's risk of developing lung cancer, regardless of how much participants said they had smoked in the past, and whether they were currently smoking. In fact, the researchers found more than 10 percent of men who had the highest levels of nicotine in their toenail clippings had never smoked.

    The findings suggest that "previous studies that have determined risk of lung cancer from tobacco use by using only reported active smoking may have underestimated the true effects of tobacco smoke," the study said. The researchers noted that nicotine is not a carcinogen, but the findings are based on the assumption that higher levels of nicotine correspond to higher levels of exposure to carcinogens in tobacco.

    Nicotine levels could serve as a possible biomarker for exposure to tobacco, and letting someone know their levels might motivate them to quit smoking, or avoid heavy exposure to secondhand smoke, the researchers said.


    The work was published online March 2 in the American Journal of Epidemiology.



    Gotta wonder how smokeless tobacco products fit into the equation.
    I thought everybody already knew that. I read it somewhere in the bible.
    Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to hide the bodies of the people I killed because they were annoying......





    I've been wrong lots of times.  Lots of times I've thought I was wrong only to find out that I was right in the beginning.


    Comment

    • snusgetter
      Member
      • May 2010
      • 10903

      #3
      Originally posted by Premium Parrots View Post
      I thought everybody already knew that. I read it somewhere in the bible.

      Which part?

      Chapter and verse, please.

      Comment

      • EricHill78
        Member
        • Jun 2010
        • 4253

        #4
        Snusgetter you are SnusOn's Wikipedia I swear lol...

        To answer your question mine are real and spectacular!

        Comment

        • snusgetter
          Member
          • May 2010
          • 10903

          #5
          Originally posted by EricHill78 View Post
          Snusgetter you are SnusOn's Wikipedia I swear lol...

          To answer your question mine are real and spectacular!

          But have you checked the oil .......... ahh, I mean nicotine levels lately?

          Comment

          • EricHill78
            Member
            • Jun 2010
            • 4253

            #6
            LOL you could prob grind them up and make a high potency snuff outta them! Would hurt like hell though, it would smell like braniff carribean I imagine.

            Comment

            • GoVegan
              Member
              • Oct 2009
              • 5603

              #7
              I guess I should be grateful I am not a research scientist.

              Comment

              • pris
                • Feb 2025

                #8
                Toque Cheese & Bacon anyone?

                Comment

                • precious007
                  Banned Users
                  • Sep 2010
                  • 5885

                  #9
                  Gotta wonder how smokeless tobacco products fit into the equation.
                  they don't

                  Comment

                  • snusjus
                    Member
                    • Jun 2008
                    • 2674

                    #10

                    Do mine look okay?

                    Comment

                    • snusgetter
                      Member
                      • May 2010
                      • 10903

                      #11


                      I think the overriding message is:
                      CHEWING TOENAILS CAN BE HAZARDOUS TO YOUR HEALTH




                      FDA: Please take appropriate action to protect the children!

                      Comment

                      • lxskllr
                        Member
                        • Sep 2007
                        • 13435

                        #12
                        I could sell my toenail trimmings for use on cutting wheels. My toenails rival antlers for hardness, and durability :^D

                        Comment

                        • Mykislt
                          Member
                          • Sep 2010
                          • 677

                          #13
                          snus use would fudge the findings in the toenails obviously.

                          Comment

                          • WickedKitchen
                            Member
                            • Nov 2009
                            • 2528

                            #14
                            Originally posted by lxskllr
                            I could sell my toenail trimmings for use on cutting wheels. My toenails rival antlers for hardness, and durability :^D
                            Must be all the fiberglass coming through.

                            Comment

                            • Speedoape
                              Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 311

                              #15
                              Mine are Gnarly! I can snatch a fish out of a river they are so badass....

                              Comment

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