You know smoking isn’t healthy, but do you know what happens to
your body when you quit? It gets better — top to bottom, lungs to legs.
Learn how in the slideshow below, featuring information from
Cleveland Clinic’s Tobacco Treatment Center.
1. Healing begins
20 minutes after your last smoke, your blood pressure and pulse drop to normal.
2. Return to Normal
After 8 hours, the level of carbon monoxide in your blood drops to normal, and the oxygen level rises to normal.
3. Avoid an Attack
After 24 hours, your chances of a heart attack decrease.
4. Regain Your Senses
At the 48-hour mark, your senses of smell and taste are enhanced, and your nerve endings start regrowing.
5. Get Your Legs Back
Between 2 weeks and 3 months, walking becomes easier, your
circulation improves and your lung function increases up to 30 percent.
6. Live and Breathe
At 1 to 9 months, your body’s overall energy increases. Coughing,
sinus congestion and shortness of breath decrease. Cilia regrow in the
lungs to help clean them and reduce the chance of infections.
7. Save Your Heart
At 1 year, your excess risk of coronary heart disease is half that of a smoker’s.
8. Lower Your Risk
After 5 years, your risk of mouth, throat and esophageal cancer is
half that of a smoker’s. Stroke risk is the same as a nonsmoker’s, and
the lung cancer death rate is almost half that of average smokers (one
pack a day).
9. Breathe Easier
After 10 years, the lung cancer death rate is comparable to a
nonsmoker’s. Precancerous cells are replaced, and the risk of mouth,
throat, esophageal, bladder, kidney and pancreatic cancer decreases.
10. Turn Back the Clock
Congratulations. 15 years after quitting, your risk of heart disease is the same as a nonsmoker’s.
No comments:
Post a Comment