This Is What Happens To Your Body After You Quit Smoking

This Is What Happens To Your Body After You Quit Smoking
Imagine it by you. When your life is confined by smoking. From the ear canal to the circulatory system, smoking can harm nearly every part of your body. Unfortunately, for nicotine addicts, quitting smoking is such a frightening specter that they tend to prefer to live with the damage that has already been caused. It doesn't matter if it ruins his life and even ruins the lives of others.

 
The first weeks after quitting smoking are usually the most difficult period for cigarette addicts. It takes at least 8-12 weeks before a person is declared free from smoking and reconciles with his new lifestyle as a former smoker.

But it turns out, the body will start the regenerative process even just a few minutes after you quit smoking. And this should be the ultimate motivation for anyone who wants to quit smoking as a proven fact medically and health science.


The following is a timeline of the reactions that occur in the body after you stop smoking.


Changes in the body after quitting smoking:

 

This Is What Happens To Your Body After You Quit Smoking
What Happens To Your Body After You Quit Smoking


In the first 20 minutes:

 

One of the effects of smoking is the increased blood pressure and heart rate due to nicotine which poison the circulatory system. The benefits of quitting smoking can be seen from the first few minutes. Approximately 20 minutes after the last cigarette, your heart rate will begin to drop and stabilize to a normal level.
 

In the first 2 hours


The tips of your fingers and toes will start to feel warm due to the gradual healing of the peripheral blood circulation. But watch out! During this time you will be prone to nicotine withdrawal.


Early signs and symptoms of nicotine withdrawal include :


severe cravings
• anxiety, tension, frustration
• drowsiness or insomnia
• increased appetite
• tingling in the palms or feet
• sweating
• headache


In the first 8-12 hours

 

Carbon monoxide when consumed in large quantities will replace oxygen to bind to red blood cells and cause various heart problems.


The first 8 hours after you quit smoking, the carbon monoxide levels in the body will begin to decrease and are replaced by oxygen.

 

also read about : Good reasons to Stop Smoking Cigarettes

 

In the first 24 hours

 

The chance of heart attack in the smokers group was higher when compared to the nonsmokers, reaching 70%. The good news is, after 24 hours from your last cigarette, your risk of a heart attack that has been haunting you will gradually decrease.


Your lungs will also begin to loosen mucus and toxic substances that clog up your airways. Also pay attention to the "withdrawal" symptoms that usually appear during this phase. As your lungs start to improve, you may experience common cold symptoms (sore throat, cough and other breathing problems).


At this stage, the CO level in the blood returns to normal. The functions of taste and smell began to improve. The cardiovascular system improves well.

 

In the first 48 hours


Nicotine causes addiction to chemicals that signal your body to meet the needs of a certain level of nicotine in a certain time. If this need is not met, cigarette addiction can lead to blurring of the senses, especially the senses of smell and taste.

After 48 hours, the nerve endings will grow back so that the two senses will work as before.

3 days after you quit smoking


At this point, all of the nicotine left in your body will completely disappear. The bad news is that it is in this phase that the symptoms of "withdrawal" are prone to arise and increase. You may experience nausea, cramps, and various emotional problems in addition to the initial nicotine withdrawal symptoms.


The tension and cravings will slowly build up during this phase, sometimes becoming unbearable.

To fight "sakaw", reward or treat yourself to a personal record net achievement from cigarettes at this time. Use cigarette money to buy clothes, for example, or running shoes that you've been dreaming of.

In the first 2-12 weeks


Smoking affects your blood circulation, making any physical activity you do feel heavy and torturous. As a result, your body's health decreases.

After weeks of getting rid of nicotine, you can now exercise or do other physical routines without feeling sick and tired. This restoration of energy is caused by the body's regenerative processes starting to become active again. Your lung and respiratory function will also begin to improve.

Generally, the symptoms of "withdrawal" will begin to decrease when a person has successfully reached this phase.


In the first 3-9 months

 

This Is What Happens To Your Body After You Quit Smoking
What Happens To Your Body After You Quit Smoking

 

The months after you are smoke free, your health will improve even more. The coughing, wheezing sound and difficulty breathing caused by smoking that you have been complaining about will slowly disappear as your lungs regenerate.

The withdrawal symptoms will completely disappear at this stage.

 

also read about : Help someone for Quit Smoking


In the first 1 year


This phase is a very monumental stepping stone for you.

Cigarettes damage artery walls and cause blockages in the arteries due to fatty substances (atheroma) that build up. After one year completely free from smoking, the risk of various heart diseases (coronary heart disease, angina, stroke) will drop dramatically by 50% when compared to when you were still smoking.

 

What happen when you quit


how smoking quit

This Is What Happens To Your Body After You Quit Smoking This Is What Happens To Your Body After You Quit Smoking Reviewed by irvan mulya on 5:10 PM Rating: 5

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