Prof. Dr. Ahmet Özdoğan

Risk reduction

Pre-op smoking cessation — a 4-week plan

Smoking is the #1 modifiable risk factor for nasal and head & neck surgery. This guide is a 6-phase nicotine-free surgical prep: resolving vasoconstriction, optimising tissue oxygenation, and a post-op anti-relapse strategy.

When should I quit smoking before surgery?

For ENT and head & neck surgery, stop smoking/nicotine at least 4 weeks before. This is the time needed for vasoconstriction to resolve and tissue oxygenation to normalise — directly affecting wound healing, cartilage graft survival, bleeding and infection risk. Protocol: W-4 decision + trigger list; W-3 withdrawal (HALT strategy); W-2 tissue healing (CO normalises, lung 10-30% improves); W-1 final optimisation + bloodwork; Surgery day: 8h NPO, honest last-use disclosure to anaesthesia; Post-op first 2 weeks most critical (even one cigarette hurts). NRT (patches/gum) may look OK for skin healing but nicotine's vasoconstrictive effect persists — ideally cut all nicotine sources. Vape/e-cigarettes carry the same nicotine risk.

  1. W -4

    4 weeks before: the decision

    Goal: nicotine-free for at least 4 weeks on surgery day. This is the time needed for tissue oxygenation to normalise and vasoconstriction to resolve.

    Approach options: (a) cold turkey — full stop in one go; (b) NRT (nicotine replacement: patches, gum, lozenges); (c) pharmacological (varenicline / Champix — prescription only, 3-month course).

    Surgeon's note: NRT (patches/gum) may seem an OK substitute for skin healing but nicotine's vasoconstrictive effect persists. Ideal: stop ALL nicotine sources.

    Home prep: clear cigarettes/ashtray/lighter. List your triggers (after coffee, stress, social setting) in writing. For each trigger, alternative: 2 min deep breathing, drink water, brief walk.

  2. W -3

    3 weeks before: crisis management

    Withdrawal symptoms peak: restlessness, irritability, concentration issues, sleep disturbance. This is expected — transient.

    Strategy "HALT": Hungry (don't skip meals, 3 main + 2 snacks), Angry ("it's just a 5-minute cigarette"), Lonely (support network), Tired (cut coffee, sleep schedule).

    Vitamin D + C support is useful for wound healing. Smoking reduces D absorption; quitting balances it.

    Smart watch or app tracking: hours-not-smoking counter. Apps like Quit Genius, Smoke Free are free.

  3. W -2

    2 weeks before: tissue healing starts

    Carbon monoxide normalises. Lung capacity improves 10-30%. Tissue oxygenation approaches optimal pre-surgical level.

    Stop aspirin / ibuprofen / vitamin E (bleeding risk). If prescribed, confirm with prescribing physician.

    Reduce alcohol: stop completely 48h pre-surgery. Limit caffeine to 3 cups/day.

    Nutrition: increase protein (wound healing), 2-2.5L water/day, omega-3 fatty acids (salmon, walnuts, flaxseed).

  4. W -1

    1 week before: final optimisation

    Bloodwork is done. CBC, coagulation, biochem — values improve in quit patients.

    Anticoagulant check: warfarin, clopidogrel, eliquis — physician adjusts 5-7 days before.

    Stress management: meditation (Headspace, Calm), light exercise, less social media. Restful sleep before surgery matters.

    Hotel/flight prep: 8h fast rule pre-anaesthesia + 2h clear liquid allowance. Pack in advance.

  5. D 0

    Surgery day

    NPO (nothing by mouth) 8h before. Clear water OK until 2h before. Don't think about, smoke. Tissue oxygenation is optimal without smoking.

    No nicotine screening at hospital — but pre-anaesthesia: "When did you last smoke?" Honest answer critical — anaesthesia plan adjusts.

    In post-op bed: stress + pain may trigger smoking urge. Ask nurse for support. NRT patch can be provided by clinic (but not ideal due to vasoconstriction).

  6. W +1 → +12

    Post-op: don't restart

    First 2 post-op weeks: tissue healing is most vulnerable. Smoke damages internal cartilage grafts, suture line, mucosa significantly. Even one cigarette hurts.

    Months 1-3: healing continues. No nose-blowing still, second-hand smoke still delays healing. Don't share enclosed spaces with smoking family.

    Months 3-12: now safe — but to not restart needs psychological support + habit replacement. Preserve the value of the surgery you had.

    Restart risk: highest in first 6 months post-op. "Surgery worked, reward myself with a smoke" thinking is common — that's the trap. Reward: sport, healthy food, travel plan.

⚠️ Vape / e-cigarette warning

E-cigarettes are marketed as "safer" — but nicotine content has the same vasoconstrictive effect. The 4-week cessation rule applies to vape too. Also: propylene glycol and glycerin in vape liquid can impair lung healing.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • No — minimum 4 weeks. CO normalises in 24 hours but vasoconstriction, tissue oxygenation, and mucosal healing need 4 weeks. 1 week still leaves ~50% wound complication risk. If possible, start 6-8 weeks before.

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