Wayne
CH.com Old Timer
  
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RedBull Rules!!
Posts: 368
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Most reports implicating “first hand”, “second hand”, and most recently “third hand” smoke (smoke that lingers in furniture, on walls, etc., etc.) as plagues on society's health aren't worth the paper they are written on – let alone the billions of public and private dollars that funded them. In our current morass, smoking has been implicated as the cause of everything from excessive body hair to pimples on your derriere. It's a challenge to research a medical condition that doesn't include smoking as a “potential cause”. Isn't it simple..... ban smoking and society's health issues will vanish, the economy will soar, IQ scores will increase, and the nation's impoverished will be saved.
In this culture, truth and fact are overshadowed by the B.S. Credibility is sacrificed in the pursuit of sociopolitical, “anti-something” agendas.
burnt-toast (Tom) [/quote]
I agree wholeheartedly Tom, I found the following pearls of wisdom in the comercial waffle from a company attemting to induce me to purchase a book.
"In 90% of the cases of chronic cluster headache, the person first experienced episodic cluster headaches which, over time, failed to achieve remission. This condition is known as secondary chronic cluster headache. This may occur under the following circumstances:
Onset of cluster headache later in life Frequent episodic cluster headache with very brief periods of remission Heavy smoker High alcohol intake Head trauma "
Followed by
"While the specific risk factors for developing cluster headache is presently unknown, there are some common traits among many patients who have cluster headache, though a direct cause and effect has not been established. These include:
Smoking - there is a very high association between smoking and cluster headache. Many physicians feel that you almost have to be a cigarette smoker to develop cluster headache, since up to 85% of patients with cluster headache are cigarette smokers. Unfortunately, cessation of smoking has no beneficial effects for those already suffering from cluster headache. Alcohol consumption - cluster headache has also been strongly tied to a history of alcohol consumption."
These statements don't appear to correlate at all with the results of the survey
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