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Paging all women: This just in from the department of "tell me something I don't know" -- smoking is bad for you. It causes cancer, emphysema and heart disease and kills an estimated 2.5 million people each year. It's also getting outrageously expensive (in New York City a single pack of cigarettes costs nearly $13!) And, just in case all that isn't enough to prompt you to slap on a nicotine patch and quit smoking this minute, perhaps appealing to your vanity will. Smoking makes women ugly (Blunt? Yes. True? You bet -- and backed up by medical research).

We're not just talking about how you look while you're actually smoking, we're talking about the residual toll that smoking takes on a woman's overall beauty -- how it ravages many parts of your body on the outside in addition to doing a major number to those parts that are hidden on the inside.

Discover the seven sneaky ways smoking is stealing your beauty.

There are many ways that you can spot a smoker -- aside from that cigarette dangling from their lips and the ever-present aroma of smoke. A smoker's skin is sallow, her teeth are typically yellow and there are telltale wrinkles around her mouth. But, hey, we won't not ruin all the fun by revealing the ravages here, let's get visual and down to the nitty gritty because, let's face it, if those commercials featuring that woman with the hole in her throat haven't scared you straight into smoking cessation, maybe your vanity will -- looking good has been known to be quite the motivator.

So, what do you say? Want to see if these seven unsightly side effects can serve as an incentive to get you to kick the habit, to quit smoking right here and now? These may not come as a complete shock, but sometimes it helps to look at things in good old black and white�

The seven sneaky reasons why smoking is stealing your beauty.

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Smoking thins your hair
Thought we'd kick it off with a doozy. Un-moved by the threat of lung cancer? How about the threat of baldness? Experts agree that the chemicals in smoke are so toxic that they wither/damage hair follicles. And Dr. Wilma F. Bergfeld, head of clinical research in the department of dermatology at the Cleveland Clinic, says that smoking also constricts blood vessels and hampers circulation, which prematurely ages those same follicles. The result? Smokers are twice as likely as non-smokers to have thinning strands. Add in the fact that smoking also increases the levels of DHT (a hormone that is a major contributor to hair loss) and you may be shopping for Rogaine before you know it.

(Psst. As if to add insult to injury, because smoking can also contribute to premature aging, you may go gray sooner too.)

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Smoking ages your skin
Smoking is second only to sun exposure as the leading cause of premature skin aging. Get this. One single drag on a cigarette puts more than a trillion (that's trillion with a "T") free radicals into your system. What do they do? Among other things (like create critical internal damage to your cells and DNA) they break down the collagen and elastin in your skin so that it starts to lose its taut, youthful appearance. And, it's not just your face that's affected; your inner arms, neck, throat and décollete are all under fire as well.

Additionally, cigarette smoke releases a chemical called acetaldehyde that causes aging by breaking down the connective tissue that holds skin together so everything starts to sag.

And, there's more...

Next: Learn another sneaky way smoking ages your skin

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Smoking ages your skin -- Part 2
Cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide, which deprives your skin of oxygen making it lackluster and dull. Also, nicotine, (the addictive troublemaker that it is) restricts blood vessels, which slows down blood, oxygen and nutrient flow to your skin leaving it sallow and dry. And, to make matters worse, because smoking damages your lungs and other body parts, most of your body's vitamin C supply is dispatched to help try and repair the harm to those parts leaving little, if any, left over to fix your skin, which is a lesser man on the totem pole.

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Smoking worsens under-eye bags and dark circles
We've already mentioned how smoking damages skin cells and robs them of certain vitamins including the hard working repairman, vitamin C. Plain and simple, smokers' skin is dehydrated and thirsty skin serves to aggravate circles and bags under the eyes.

Compounding the problem is the fact that, according to a John's Hopkins study, smokers are four times as likely as non-smokers to feel sleepy in the morning. Why? It's suspected that nocturnal nicotine withdrawal symptoms may disrupt sleep patterns. And, that lack of sleep can worsen dark circles and bags under the eyes.

Paging all women: This just in from the department of "tell me something I don't know" -- smoking is bad for you. It causes cancer, emphysema and heart disease and kills an estimated 2.5 million people each year. It's also getting outrageously expensive (in New York City a single pack of cigarettes costs nearly $13!) And, just in case all that isn't enough to prompt you to slap on a nicotine patch and quit smoking this minute, perhaps appealing to your vanity will. Smoking makes women ugly (Blunt? Yes. True? You bet -- and backed up by medical research).

We're not just talking about how you look while you're actually smoking, we're talking about the residual toll that smoking takes on a woman's overall beauty -- how it ravages many parts of your body on the outside in addition to doing a major number to those parts that are hidden on the inside.

Discover the seven sneaky ways smoking is stealing your beauty.

There are many ways that you can spot a smoker -- aside from that cigarette dangling from their lips and the ever-present aroma of smoke. A smoker's skin is sallow, her teeth are typically yellow and there are telltale wrinkles around her mouth. But, hey, we won't not ruin all the fun by revealing the ravages here, let's get visual and down to the nitty gritty because, let's face it, if those commercials featuring that woman with the hole in her throat haven't scared you straight into smoking cessation, maybe your vanity will -- looking good has been known to be quite the motivator.

So, what do you say? Want to see if these seven unsightly side effects can serve as an incentive to get you to kick the habit, to quit smoking right here and now? These may not come as a complete shock, but sometimes it helps to look at things in good old black and white�

The seven sneaky reasons why smoking is stealing your beauty.
BY AUDREY FINE | SHARES
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