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Arteries improve after smokers quit, study finds

A new study shows that smokers who quit have healthier arteries a year later and probably will have less risk of heart disease as a result. Doctors say the improvement came even though people who kicked the habit gained an average of 9 pounds. The study at the University of Wisconsin in Madison involved 1,500 smokers who were given one of five methods, such as nicotine patches or lozenges, to help them quit.