In just 15 days or less, you will quit smoking and blow smoke away, and on your way back to better health...Guaranteed!
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Want to Quit Smoking?
Would you give an alcoholic more drinks to get him to quit?
Would you give a dieter more cake and candy to help him lose weight?
Would you give a drug addict more of his favorite drug if you were trying to get him to quit?
Of course not! So why would anyone want to put MORE nicotine in their bodies when it's nicotine they're trying to lose their addiction to?
It all comes down to the fact that to quit smoking you eventually have to get off the nicotine. And withdrawal from nicotine is VERY unpleasant. It's the single thing that causes even the most committed "quitters" to go back.
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ANTIBACO - Effective Natural way to quit smoking
That's what makes the Antibaco Supplement so amazing. Researchers have
discovered a way to combine the all-natural healing properties of a unique
variety of traditional ayurvedic herbal formulas to completely and naturally
eliminateyour body's needfor nicotine.
Effects
of Tobacco Smoking
- Smoking KILLS
- Every year hundreds of thousands of people around the world die from diseases caused by smoking.
- One in two lifetime smokers will die from their habit. Half of these deaths will occur in middle age.
- Tobacco smoke also contributes to a number of cancers.
- The mixture of nicotine and carbon monoxide in each cigarette you smoke temporarily increases your heart rate and blood pressure, straining your heart and blood vessels.
- This can cause heart attacks and stroke. It slows your blood flow, cutting off oxygen to your feet and hands. Some smokers end up having their limbs amputated.
- Tar coats your lungs like soot in a chimney and causes cancer. A 20-a-day smoker breathes in up to a full cup (210 g) of tar in a year.
- Changing to low-tar cigarettes does not help because smokers usually take deeper puffs and hold the smoke in for longer, dragging the tar deeper into their lungs.
- Carbon monoxide robs your muscles, brain and body tissue of oxygen, making your whole body and especially your heart work harder. Over time, your airways swell up and let less air into your lungs.
-
Smoking causes disease and
is a slow way to die. The strain put on your body by smoking often causes
years of suffering.
Emphysema
is an illness that slowly rots
your lungs. People with emphysema often get
bronchitis
again and again, and suffer lung and heart failure. - Lung cancer from smoking is caused by the tar in tobacco smoke. Men who smoke are ten times more likely to die from lung cancer than non-smokers.
- Heart disease and strokes are also more common among smokers than non-smokers.
- Smoking causes fat deposits to narrow and block blood vessels which leads to heart attack.
- Smoking causes around one in five deaths from heart disease.
- In younger people, three out of four deaths from heart disease are due to smoking.
Harmful Effects Of Smoking

Cigarettes and more specifically tobacco smoke are full of chemicals and poisons. Tobacco smoke contains over 4,000 chemicals, many of which make smoking harmful.
Harmful Chemicals
In Cigarettes & Tobacco Smoke

Tobacco smoke contains over 4,000 different chemicals. At least 43 are known carcinogens (cause cancer in humans).
Cigarettes are one of few products which can be sold legally which can harm and even kill you over time if used as intended.
Currently there are ongoing lawsuits in the USA which aim to hold tobacco companies responsible for the effects of smoking on the health of long term smokers.
Benzene
(petrol additive)
A colourless cyclic
hydrocarbon obtained from coal and petroleum, used as a
solvent
in fuel and in chemical manufacture - and contained in
cigarette smoke. It is a known
carcinogen
and is associated with leukaemia.
Formaldehyde
(embalming fluid)
A colourless liquid,
highly poisonous,
used to preserve dead bodies - also
found in cigarette smoke. Known to cause
cancer,
respiratory, skin
and gastrointestinal problems.
Ammonia
(toilet cleaner)
Used as a flavouring, frees
nicotine from tobacco turning it into a gas, found in
dry
cleaning fluids.
Acetone
(nail polish remover)
Fragrant volatile liquid
ketone, used as a
solvent,
for example, nail polish remover - found in cigarette
smoke.
Tar
Particulate matter
drawn into lungs
when you inhale on a lighted cigarette. Once inhaled,
smoke condenses and about
70 per cent
of the tar in the smoke is
deposited
in the smoker's lungs.
Nicotine
(insecticide/addictive
drug)
One of the
most addictive substances known
to man, a powerful and fast-acting medical and non-medical
poison.
This is the chemical which causes addiction.
Carbon Monoxide (CO)
(car exhaust fumes)
An odourless, tasteless and
poisonous gas,
rapidly
fatal in
large amounts - it's the same gas that comes out of
car exhausts
and is the main gas in cigarette smoke, formed when the cigarette is lit. Others
you may recognize are :
Arsenic (rat poison), Hydrogen Cyanide (gas chamber poison)





