A study was made of the haemorheological changes that took place in the days immediately following tobacco withdrawal from cigarette smokers. In both males and females substantial and persistent reductions in blood viscosity occurred within 2 d, the fall at high shear rate corresponding to about 8% while at low shear rate it was approximately twice as much. These changes were due partly to a fall in packed cell volume (PCV), but also to reductions in total plasma protein and fibrinogen concentrations which led to reductions in plasma viscosity and rouleaux formation. These plasma protein-related changes were less pronounced in the female group. The results indicate that, even in the very short-term, abstention from cigarettes leads to substantial improvements in the haemorheological profile of heavy smokers.
Cigarette smoking is known to affect many haematological parameters but little is known of their rate of return to normal on withdrawal of cigarettes. Two groups of chronic smokers were studied whilst smoking and in the 2 weeks after cessation. A rapid return towards normal was found in the elevated haemoglobm concentration, packed cell volume, red cell count, white cell count, neutrophil count, lymphocyte count and platelet count, indicating that at least some of the abnormalities in these parameters are an acute, reversible effect of cigarette smoking rather than being a response to tissue damage.
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