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|تخزين الدماغ
اللامحدود |وحدات مخرجها تعليمي|هل
أنت ذكي|الإيمان بالله و الصحة |أسرار
لذكر الله |أمثلة|الصحة
الجلدية|علم اليقين|وحدات
قياس الطاتم |البعد الثالث للكون|خواص
الوحدات الطاتمية |الشيخ والمريد|
بحث التشافي بالقـرآن |السواك للتعليم|قواعد
التعليم الروحي |تعقيب على مقال|منحنيات
الطاقة |تطبيقات سياسية للطاقة|موقع
جنة آدم |تلاوة القرآن والهدوء|أساس
حضارتنا التنويري|عربياً لعلكم تعقلون|
تقوية جهاز المناعة|لماذا اقتربت الساعة|Parapsychology
Therapy|
هل أنت ذكي ؟
إذا أنت لا تدخن
مقال عن ارتباط التدخين بالغباء وأحياناً بالجنون
..
مقدمة :
كنت قد ذكرت في نظرية الطاقة التنويرية القرآنية أن السواك هو
وسيلة التنوير والتعلم للعصر القادم وأن السجائر هي وسيلة التظليم أو التدمير
الفكري الأهم في العالم تمهيداً لإبقاء الدول تحت سيادة دول تشارك صناعة
التبغ في إثمها ودماء المسلمين التي تسيل من وراء هذا الاحتلال التجاري المبطن
بجيوش تجوب العالم لضمان هيمنة دول المخدرات والسجائر على العالم ..( بني إسرائيل
أولها ومن دار في فلكها ) ..
وإن كل يوم يأتي يدلني فيه عظمة السواك على عظمة رسالة ختام
النبوة ...كم حملت رسول الإسلام من حب للبشرية ؟
سبحانك ربي وما أعظم جلال وجهك وودك وحبك للإنسان ؟ كم ملأت هذا
الدين بتشريعات رفع الظلم والرق عن الإنسان ؟
المقال التالي ربط الذكاء بالبعد عن التدخين ....وكنت دوماً أقول
إن أبقار خيال المارلبورو هي في الحياة الفعلية عبارة عن أفراد عائلة أهملت
تربية أبنائها وتركتهم فريسة المخدرات ..
صياد خيال مارلبورو
د رامي محمد ديابي
22-10-1425
Smoking 'seriously damages your IQ' - Sunday Times
December 5, 2004
Camillo Fracassini
SMOKERS risk damaging their intelligence, suffering memory loss, slower reflexes
and impaired problem solving.
Scientists have, for the first time, linked smoking with impaired mental agility
in a study which shows that the habit can reduce a person's IQ by up to 3%.
They claim this dip is enough to affect smokers' quality of life, making them
less efficient at performing everyday tasks such as counting change or doing
crossword puzzles. The study also appears to contradict an earlier report which
suggested that smoking might help protect people from dementia.
While smoking cigarettes is known to cause cancer, heart disease, birth defects
and impotence, its impact on intelligence has been less clear.
Scientists at Aberdeen and Edinburgh universities contacted 413 people who had
taken part in the Scottish national IQ survey in 1947, when they were aged 11.
The subjects were tested again in 2000-02, when they were aged 64. The two sets
of results, across a range of standard IQ measurements, including memory,
learning and reasoning, were then compared.
Factors that might have skewed the results, such as alcohol consumption,
occupational status, level of education, heart disease and hypertension, were
screened out of the results.
Researchers discovered that the IQ scores of smokers were up to 3% lower than
those of former smokers and non-smokers. Their psychomotor speed - co-ordination
and dexterity - was also lower.
On average, the IQ of smokers showed a steeper decline over the 53 years than
those of non-smokers. When lung function, which is known to have an effect on
the working of the brain, was taken into account, the IQ scores of smokers were
4% lower.
The study, published in the current edition of the scientific journal Addictive
Behaviors, found no significant difference between the IQs of ex-smokers and
non-smokers.
"Our findings are significant because they show for the first time the long-term
effect of smoking on cognitive ability," said John Starr, of Edinburgh
University's department of geriatric medicine.
"The impact of smoking on the IQ of the people involved may appear small but it
will impair their quality of life. They will experience niggly problems with any
task that requires some sort of mental agility - whether that's organising their
daily life, remembering what to buy at the shops, doing crossword puzzles or
playing bridge.
"The people involved in our research are still relatively young, they are not in
their seventies or eighties when you would expect to see a noticeable effect.
"The impact of smoking on cognitive ability may be even higher than our study
suggests because we excluded socioeconomic factors. It is known that people from
a lower social class smoke more."
Starr believes smoking may reduce IQ by damaging the blood vessels that supply
the brain and releasing toxic chemicals into the bloodstream. It is known that a
large number of cases of dementia involve damage to blood vessels supplying the
brain. "Most people who have Alzheimer's disease have some kind of vascular
disease and that may relate to smoking," said Starr.
Phil Hanlon, professor of public health at Glasgow University and an adviser to
the Scottish executive, said: "What is elegant about this study is that IQ was
measured using a standard mechanism across the whole population.
"The researchers have drawn on unique historical records and have had a long
enough follow-up period to provide a picture of a genuine population as it has
aged."
Hanlon added that he was particularly concerned by the study's implication that
smoking may be a cause of dementia.
"This rings alarm bells. Do people with lower IQs have a greater chance of
Alzheimer's disease? I think they probably do. These people will also be at
greater risk of multi-infarct dementia, where lots of little strokes eat away at
the brain's capacity. Has some of what we have seen in the way of dementia been
due to smoking in the past and we have not been able to establish this? It could
well be the case."
Maureen Moore, chief executive of the anti-smoking group ASH Scotland, said:
"This is an extremely interesting and valuable piece of research which confirms
the damage that tobacco does to smokers.
"We know smoking is a killer through heart disease, cancer and respiratory
disease. This study shows that the way smoking interferes with metabolic
processes can affect IQ as well. We hope this will be seen as another piece of
evidence as to why people shouldn't smoke."
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/[...]1389358-1506,00.html
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