Smoking can Cause Impotence?

Social IssuesSexuality

  • Author Mitch Champagne
  • Published June 5, 2010
  • Word count 633

What can you do to Stop Smoking Permanently?

Let’s be honest. You’re addicted. Yes, you’ve been telling eAs if we haven’t heard enough that smoking kills, here’s the latest. Have you heard that smoking has the potential to damage a man's fertility in three areas: the quality of his sperm, his ability to have sexual intercourse and his libido (or sex drive)?

Now we know that smoking is bad for you, but now we know it’s bad for your family.

Smoking in Women has shown to provide babies with lower birth rate, along with other side effects, but most men don’t know what smoking can affect them.

Sperm – Most men assume that they are fertile, but smoking men are prone to producing sperm that are defective, and a poorer quality than non-smokers. Not only does smoking damages the lungs and circulatory system but there are evidence of DNA damage in smokers' sperm, which has the potential of causing birth defects.

Impotence – With over 4,000 chemicals introduced into the body by cigarettes, it’s hard to keep track of all of the potential damage they can do. There is evidence of a wide range of causes and effects on the body. Some are known to block arteries and therefore restrict blood flow. This is one reason why smoking is associated with heart disease and stroke.

Men are aware that if you have blocked arteries, one of the side effects is that the arteries to the penis can also become blocked, making it increasingly difficulty for blood to reach the penis. If blood doesn’t make it to the penis, (that’s a scary thought) then he can’t sustain an erection. Of course no erection, no penetration. No penetration, no babies. Younger smokers are less likely to have trouble achieving an erection than older smoking men, but sooner or later, it catches up with us…all male smokers who don't give up smoking are running the risk of some degree of impotency.

Sex drive – Here’s the biggie. Smoking reduces a man's desire for sex, which is obviously bad news if he and his partner are trying to get pregnant. If there is no desire, again no babies. Carbon monoxide, one the chemicals found in cigarettes, has the potential to reduce a man's testosterone. That means that men between the ages of 25 and 40, who smoked one or two packs of cigarettes per day, were having less sex than non-smoking men in the same age group.

Now, what if the male smoker can’t quit? The main issue is that Smokers are addicts, so quitting is one of the most difficult hurdles to overcome. So what’s causing the addiction? There are two main factors to the addiction. One is the nicotine, and smokers know had addictive nicotine can me. Smokers fail because they can’t overcome the nicotine cravings and the "comfort factor" of holding the cigarette. The tactile feel along with the nicotine can be almost impossible for them to overcome.

One of the tools that have had success has been the electronic cigarette. The e-cigarette offers the smoker the nicotine he craves, without all of the extra baggage that comes with the burning and inhaling of the tobacco.

If you’re goal is to become a parent with your partner, and you’re a smoker, you owe it to yourself and your partner to investigate what the electronic cigarette can offer you.

I have a link below and videos at that link that can give you the information you need.

You’re addicted, ok? But not to just to cigarettes. Focus on the main issue, and get rid of that pack of cancer sticks. Check the website, and get the information you need and TAKE ACTION.

Mitch Champagne is the author of "The Great Expulsion" and has written numerous reviews and articles. 

Please act now to preserve your health and your life

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