11/15/2021
ππ helloo mamacita, If you're a smoker considering cosmetic surgery, your plastic surgeon will likely require you to stop smoking for at least four weeks before your procedure.
π
Tabacco smoke and ni****ne contribute to decreased blood flow, impaired wound healing and reduced skin flap survival. The literature says smokers have significant complication rates after many plastic surgical procedures.
It's better to delay surgery than to risk having your tissue die. After surgery, you still can't smoke, so develop nerves of steel and think about how much you might regret that one little puff.
πNi****ne-related problems during and after plastic surgery are:
π Infections: ni****ne generates a predisposition to them, in addition to hindering the agents that fight them.
π Necrosis of lipid cells, manifested by the formation of hard lumps.
π Complications in wound healing.
π Poor quality healing, with wide and thick scars.
π Clot formation
π Less resistance to pain. Ni****ne has been shown to cause patients to suffer more and anesthesia to be less effective.
π Possible damage to blood vessels.
π Damage to breast implants, or even rejection.
π Severe complications that put the patient at risk
β οΈthe content of this video is demonstrative, contains effects that simulate smoke. π We recommend not smoking. It is detrimental to your health.
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