|
Subscribe
to
our
newsletter.
It's Free!
Related Links:
• Avoiding the Temptation to Smoke • Avoiding Weight Gain When You Quit Smoking • Benefits of Quitting Smoking • Cancer Sticks • Cigarette Cravings • Give Up Smoking With Nicotine Gum • Giving Up Smoking • Health Risks of Smoking • Helping Your Spouse Quit Smoking • Hospital Smoking Cessation Programs • How to Stay Quit • Identify Smoking Triggers • Kick the Smoking Habit • Lung Cancer and Smoking • Methods of Quitting Smoking • New York State Quit Smoking Web Site • Nicotine Patches as an Aid to Quitting Smoking • Nicotine Replacement Therapy • Nicotine Vaccine • Pregnancy and Smoking • Psychological Cues to Smoking • Quit Smoking Again • Quit Smoking and Become Wealthy • Quit Smoking and Freshen Your Breath • Quit Smoking and Live Longer • Quit Smoking and Stay Slim • Quit Smoking Cold Turkey • Quit Smoking for a Healthy Lifestyle • Quit Smoking for Health and Fitness • Quit Smoking for the Sake of Your Kids • Quit Smoking Game Plan • Quit Smoking Methods • Quit Smoking Now • Quit Smoking with Hypnosis • Quit Smoking with Zyban • Quitting Smoking for Life • Secondhand Smoke and Your Childrens Lungs • Sign a Stop Smoking Contract • Smoke Free Zones in Your Environment • Smoking and Surgery • Smoking and the Pill • Smoking and Your Sex Life • Smoking and Your Social Life • Smoking Causes Cancers • Smoking Cessation • Smoking Damages Your Skin • Smoking is An Addiction • Smoking is Bad for Your Health • Smoking Relapses • Smoking Related Illnesses • Smoking Temptations • Stop Smoking With Herbal Remedies • Teenage Smoking • The Urge to Smoke • Weight Gain and Quitting Smoking • What Happens After Quitting Smoking • What Smoking Does to Your Body • Why People Smoke • Why Smoke • Withdrawal Symptoms When Quitting Smoking • Women Smokers • Your Quit Smoking Plan
|
What Happens After Quitting Smoking
What Happens After You Quit Smoking

One of the problems many smokers have is dealing with the symptoms of withdrawal. This is partly because the symptoms are so strong, but is also largely because they are unexpected. For this reason, it is important for smokers who are trying to quit to be aware of the possible withdrawal symptoms ahead of time and to make plans for dealing with them.
You may experience dizziness when you quit smoking. This is because of the increase in oxygen in the blood combined with the blood pressure lowering back to normal. For this reason, it is important for you to be careful if trying to quit. Be aware of this possibility and don’t work too hard. You can also try going for a walk, getting fresh air, or slowly changing positions. Dizziness often lasts for several days before going away.
When you quit smoking, your body’s respiratory system attempts to clean itself out. This can result in excessive coughing and even a runny nose. It is best to drink lots of fluids at this time in order to help your body cleanse itself.
At the same time, you may get a sore throat. This is because your throat is clearing away the tar and nicotine and growing new tissues. Sucking on sweets or throat lozenges can help, as can eating honey.
Tightness in Chest, Flatulence, Constipation, and Headaches are possible effects of giving up smoking. Again, you aren’t sick. This isn’t the flu; these are withdrawal symptoms as your body attempts to recover from the nicotine, tar, and other toxins it endured from smoking. The tight chest is actually caused from all of the coughing you have been doing. Your chest muscles have become sore, so you need to do relaxation exercises and try some deep breathing to relax your chest muscles.
The movement in your intestines temporarily slowing down causes the flatulence and constipation. If you eat plenty of fiber and drink lots of fluids, you should see a little relief. The headaches are the result of an increased blood flow to your brain. In addition, this blood has more oxygen. Relaxation exercises and drinking fluids will also help with this problem.
You will most likely feel irritable or angry when you quit smoking. This is because your body is desperate to get more nicotine. Relaxation exercises can help you get through this. It is also important to let your anger out in a safe way. If you try to bottle it up, you will become tenser and you will feel a greater need to have another cigarette.
You may also have difficulty concentrating. This goes back to the increased blood flow to you brain. Basically, your brain is not used to this and is not sure what to do. It is used to relying on the stimulation provided by the nicotine. It will take a few weeks for it to remember how to do its job without the help of the drug.
At the same time, you might experience feelings of fatigue. This is because your metabolic rate returns to normal after you quit smoking. It is important that you don’t over exert yourself at this time. Give your body time to become adjusted to the change. This should take a few weeks.
Withdrawal symptoms can begin to appear as soon as 4 hours after your last cigarette. For most people, the intensity of the systems reaches its peak at around three to five days and they disappear after 2 weeks.
|
|