Is the damage from smoking reversible? The answer might surprise you

Close-up Of Human Hands Breaking The Cigarette

If you’re not quitting smoking because you think the damage is done, put down that cigarette. The truth is, much of the damage from smoking can be reversed — and in as little as 24 hours after quitting.

“It really doesn’t matter how long a person has been smoking,” said Dr. Zhonglin Hao, co-lead of the thoracic oncology team at the Georgia Cancer Center at Augusta University. “If you quit, you will improve the overall quality of life for you and your family.”

Quitting smoking is far easier than fighting cancer or struggling to take a breath because of a bad heart or damaged lungs, and the benefits are huge. Take a look at these numbers:

Cut your cancer risk in half. After five smoke-free years, the lung-cancer death rate for an average smoker (one pack a day) is reduced almost by half. And after 15 years, the risk is almost the same as that of a nonsmoker. Quitting also decreases the chance that a person will develop cancer of the mouth, throat, pancreas and bladder.

Slash your heart attack risk — in just 24 hours. The American Cancer Society says that a smoker’s chance of a heart attack drops within 24 hours of his or her last cigarette. After one year, the increased risk of heart attack is reduced by half.

Stop strokes in as little as five years. When a smoker quits, the risk of a stroke drops to that of a nonsmoker. How long does that take? In studies completed so far, it’s ranged from five to 20 years.

Enjoy the lungs of a nonsmoker after five years. According to a recent study, within five years of quitting, middle-aged smokers had slowed the rate of decline in their lung function to that of the average nonsmoker.

Learn your lung cancer risk factors and if a lung cancer screening is recommended for you by taking this Healthy Lung Quiz.
The Georgia Cancer Center offers a tobacco cessation clinic and classes use to help you and the people you care about live a healthier life without tobacco. Make your appointment today! Visit our Tobacco Cessation Program, or call 706-721-0456.
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Augusta University Health

Based in Augusta, Georgia, Augusta University Health is a world-class health care network, offering the most comprehensive primary, specialty and subspecialty care in the region. Augusta University Health provides skilled, compassionate care to its patients, conducts leading-edge clinical research and fosters the medical education and training of tomorrow’s health care practitioners. Augusta University Health is a not-for-profit corporation that manages the clinical operations associated with Augusta University.

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The Georgia Cancer Center at Augusta University is dedicated to reducing the burden of cancer in Georgia and across the globe through superior care, innovation, and education. Through unprecedented expansion, the Georgia Cancer Center is providing access to more first-in-the-nation clinical trials, world-renowned experts and life-saving options.