Health Topics

The Cardiovascular Cost of Long-Term Smoking

Smoking doubles the risk of heart attack and triples the risk of stroke. The mechanisms are well understood — and they begin with the very first cigarette.

Tobacco smoke causes endothelial dysfunction within minutes of inhalation. Over years, this cumulative damage accelerates atherosclerosis and raises blood pressure. The result is a dramatically elevated risk of myocardial infarction and stroke.

The good news is that cessation works fast. Within 20 minutes of quitting, blood pressure drops. Within a year, excess coronary heart disease risk halves. Within 15 years, the risk of heart attack approaches that of a lifelong non-smoker.

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