Unique to You

Your oral conditions, medical conditions and lifestyle choices impact your oral health. Learn more about your oral health risk and how to lower it.

Tobacco

Most people are aware of the adverse health effects of tobacco use due to nicotine and other harmful chemicals. Longer and more frequent use of tobacco products dramatically increases the risk of health conditions such as cancer, respiratory diseases, and cardiovascular disease. In addition, smoking reduces the oxygen level in your bloodstream. It also weakens your immune system, making it harder to fight infections and affecting your ability to heal.

Tobacco can also have serious, negative effects on your oral health. The effects are not limited to tobacco users either. "Research shows that exposure to secondhand smoke may increase a person's risk of developing lip, mouth, and throat cancers by more than 50%. Individuals exposed to secondhand smoke for more than 10 to 15 years may be twice as likely to develop oral cancer as those not exposed to passive smoke."1

Tobacco use of any kind, including cigarettes, cigars, chew, snuff, pipes, vaping (e-cigarettes), or betel nut, immediately affects your mouth's soft tissues, jawbones, lips, and throat. Like the effects of tobacco on other parts of your body, longer and more frequent use of tobacco dramatically increases your risk of developing unhealthy oral conditions.

Common effects of tobacco use on your mouth include:

What to do

At home

At the dentist

  • Author: Fluent staff
  • Medical review: Thomas J. Greany DDS, 5/15/2021
  • Last updated: 1/11/2022
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