Publication | Closed Access
Evaluation of cancer risk in tobacco chewers and smokers: An epidemiologic assessment
207
Citations
7
References
1971
Year
Tobacco CessationHigh Risk SitesEpidemiology Of CancerPathologyOral MedicineTobacco ChewersCancer Risk FactorsOral CancerTobacco ControlPreventive MedicineNicotineClinical EpidemiologyEpidemiologic AssessmentToxicologyPublic HealthDiagnostic SciencesSmoking Related Lung DiseaseCancer ResearchAllergyTobacco UseMedicineOral CavityCancer DiagnosisCancer PreventionLung CancerEpidemiologyCancer RiskCancer EpidemiologyOral BiologyHead And Neck CancerBombay Cancer RegistryOncologyVaping
A retrospective study of cancer at high risk sites in the region of the head and neck was undertaken at the Bombay Cancer Registry, in 1968, to evaluate the effects of tobacco when chewed or smoked. There is sufficient evidence available today to indict chewing and smoking of tobacco as factors of great importance in the etiology of oral, pharyngeal, laryngeal, and esophageal cancers—the most common sites affected by the disease in Greater Bombay. This cause/ effect association is probably as intimate as that of cigarette smoking and lung cancer. The carcinogenic action of chewed tobacco is particularly evident at those sites where the bolus is retained in place for any length of time. Likewise, inhalation of tobacco fumes during the act of smoking produces a stream of gas and of solid particles which impinges directly on the oropharynx and especially on the soft palate initially and exposes smokers to the increased risk of developing cancer at exactly these posterior sites in the oropharynx, rather than more anteriorly in the oral cavity where the tissues do not directly bear the brunt of the onslaught from the smoke. It is revealing to find that the high risk sites involved in tobacco chewers appear to be the least affected in smokers, and vice versa.
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