What Happens After You Quit Smoking
Immediate Rewards
Within 12 hours after you have your last cigarette, your body will begin
to heal itself. The levels of carbon monoxide and nicotine in your system
will decline rapidly, and your heart and lungs will begin to repair the
damage caused by cigarette smoke.
Within a few days you will probably begin to notice some remarkable changes
in your body. Your sense of smell and taste may improve. You will breathe
easier, and your smoker's hack will begin to disappear, although you may
notice that you will continue to cough for a while. And you will be free
from the mess, smell, inconvenience, expense, and dependence of cigarette
smoking.
Immediate Effects
As your body begins to repair itself, instead of feeling better right away,
you may feel worse for a while. It's important to understand that healing
is a process­p;it begins immediately, but it continues over time. These
"withdrawal pangs" are really symptoms of the recovery process
(see Withdrawal Symptoms and Activities That Might
Help).
Immediately after quitting, many ex-smokers experience "symptoms of
recovery" such as temporary weight gain caused by fluid retention,
irregularity, and dry, sore gums or tongue. You may feel edgy, hungry, more
tired, and more short-tempered than usual and have trouble sleeping and
notice that you are coughing a lot. These symptoms are the result of your
body clearing itself of nicotine, a powerful addictive chemical. Most nicotine
is gone from the body in 2-3 days.
Long-range Benefits
It is important to understand that the long range after-effects of quitting
are only temporary and signal the beginning of a healthier life. Now that
you've quit, you've added a number of healthy productive days to each year
of your life. Most important, you've greatly improved your chances for a
longer life. You have significantly reduced your risk of death from heart
disease, stroke, chronic bronchitis, emphysema, and several kinds of cancer­p;not
just lung cancer. (Cigarette smoking is responsible every year for approximately
130,000 deaths from cancer, 170,000 deaths from heart disease, and 50,000
deaths from lung disease.)



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