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The Effects of Nicotine to Your Body

When you smoke, you inhale not only a mere cigarette or tobacco smoke but rather all the harmful substances they contain including nicotine. Once the nicotine is inhaled, it gets into your blood stream and travels to different body organs. It will get through the blood vessels, arteries, hormones, heart and your brain. Moreover, nicotine can also get into the body's metabolism. In female smokers, the nicotine substance will enter the cervix.

On the other hand, pregnant women who smoke usually find out nicotine effects that typically appear after giving birth. The newborns are also at high risk of having nicotine effects showing up in the umbilical cord and in the amniotic fluid. This is the rationale behind birth defects.

The presence of nicotine in the body after quitting smoking depends on several factors like how frequent you smoke. For regular smokers, it usually takes around four days for the body to be totally free from the smoking substances.

Many people smoke because they feel and believe that smoking gives them pleasure, makes them relax and feel good or even better. In some cases, smoking functions as a depressant, which could hamper the flow of information through various nerve cells. The nervous system of the body then begins to settle in nicotine. Such condition is best described as nicotine addiction. This hinders them to stop the habit as they become more and more dependent on it. So, for those who plan to get rid of smoking, readiness to overcome nicotine craving and symptoms is very important to succeed in the end.

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