Smoking can cause your skin to be dry and lose elasticity, leading to wrinkles and stretch marks. Your skin tone may become dull and grayish. By your early 30s, wrinkles can begin to appear around your mouth and eyes, adding years to your face.
Related posts:
- Medicare Card, Learn to Prevent Skin Cancer Medicare Card, Learn to Prevent Skin Cancer...
- Medicare Card, Skin Cancer and What You Need to Know Medicare Card, Skin Cancer and What You Need to Know...
- Medicare Card, NIH researchers conduct first genomic survey of human skin fungal diversity Medicare Card, NIH researchers conduct first genomic survey of human skin fungal diversity...
- Saliva is effective in screening for CMV infection in newborns, says NIH-funded research Swabbing a newborn’s mouth for saliva can be used to quickly and effectively screen for cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection, a leading cause of hearing loss in children, says research in the June 2 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine....
- Medicare Card, Organ and Tissue Donation Medicare Card, Organ and Tissue Donation...
- NIH-funded study shows early brain effects of HIV in mouse model A new mouse model closely resembles how the human body reacts to early HIV infection and is shedding light on nerve cell damage related to the disease, according to researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health....
- Medicare Card, Text Message Support to Help You Quit Smoking Medicare Card, Text Message Support to Help You Quit Smoking...
- Medicare Card, Sharp rise in diabetic eye disease makes American Diabetes Month ever more important Medicare Card, Sharp rise in diabetic eye disease makes American Diabetes Month ever more important...
- Medicare Card, NIH-funded study examines frequency of follow-up bone mineral density tests Osteoporosis is characterized by reduced bone mass and bone strength leading to an increased risk of fractures. Although health care professionals have long known that low bone mineral density (BMD) is an important risk factor for bone fractures, questions have remained about how often BMD should be measured. Scientists at the Institute for Aging Research […]...
- Wide Variety of Bacteria Mapped Across the Human Body By analyzing bacterial communities in and on several people, scientists have begun to create an atlas of bacterial diversity that documents the different types of microbes that thrive in distinct regions of the human body. This research sets the stage for determining how changes in bacterial communities help to cause or prevent disease....
- NIAID Announces New Award to Study the Effects of Radiation and Aging on the Human Immune System NIAID Announces New Award to Study the Effects of Radiation and Aging on the Human Immune System ...
- Glaucoma — A Leading Cause of Blindness Glaucoma is the leading cause of blindness in the United States. Although there are usually no symptoms in the early stages, glaucoma can be detected through a comprehensive eye exam. Early detection and treatment can help to save your vision, so get regular eye exams....
- Medicare Card, How to Protect Your Retirement Benefits If You Lose Your Job Medicare Card, How to Protect Your Retirement Benefits If You Lose Your Job...
- Medicare Card, Cervical Cancer Screenings Result in Early Detection Medicare Card, Cervical Cancer Screenings Result in Early Detection...
- Scientists identify gene that could hold the key to muscle repair Researchers have long questioned why patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) tend to manage well through childhood and adolescence, yet succumb to their disease in early adulthood, or why elderly people who lose muscle strength following bed rest find it difficult or impossible to regain. Now, researchers at the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal […]...