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Posted on Jul 27, 2020, 5:15 pm
#11

Hello,

Thanks for the reply. Of course you are right, quitting is the best. I was just wondering if it'd make too much impact upon my body although i'm smoking as less as possible, 0.5 and less per day. I'm sort of a paranoid guy, that's why I'm asking everything though. But yeah, thanks for the honest reply.

Best Regards, have a good day

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Posted on Jul 28, 2020, 5:06 am
#12

heres a medscape article on the effect of ciggies
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/717392_3
you may have to make an account but theyre free

like you mentioned before quitting smoking really is your best bet. you literally have nothing to lose by doing it.
imo you want to get youself to peak physical condition before undergoing this procedure

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Posted on Jul 28, 2020, 8:02 pm
#13

Quote from: ghkid2019 on July 27, 2020, 12:30:04 PMI remember a diary (can't recall who) where someone quit cigs a year before his initial surgery and he still got non union. And this was with a good doctor.

So yes, quit fully long before, ideally now, if you don't want to have a gap in your bones. Nicotine and tobacco are extremely highly correlated with slow fracture healing and bone growth, so no juuls or stigs either.


None smoker for a year and nonunion? To my experience probably its not related to smoking, it is most probably fast lengthening other systemic diseases for example hidden diabetes.

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