Well The THC In Pot, Weed, Whatever You Wanna Call It Usually Stays In The Bloodstream For About 30 Days If You Drink Lots Of Water It Will Flush The THC Out Of Your System Faster But It Will Still Stay There For Almost A Month
3
45+ days
depends on your fat content but if you are not a regular smoker it will be far less. 3-14days depending on your fat content and also exercise and water. best chances are to drink lots of water and sweat alot...
Depends on frequency and quanity of use. If you aren't a regular smoker and smoke one time it could be out of you system in 24-48 hours. If you are a heavy user, smoking daily or more it could take months to completely be out of you system.
"THC can stay in you blood stream for about 5-7 months" Someone is being pessimistic. First, are you smoking swag or kine. Second, are you a pothead or just an occasional smoker. Third, how fat are you. Fourth, how active are you. Depending on how you answer it will take 2-45 days. In some cases, potheads can still have THC after 90 days of them quitting.
Quickly! This was an experiment done on one chronic smoker. We had the smoker cease smoking for a couple of hours. Then we attached a blood-flow meter to his finger. Then the smoker lit up his regular cigarette. In the middle of his first inhalation, the blood flow went from large to tiny. The effect was more immediate that we had anticipated.
Maybe a week or 2 depending on how much you have when you do smoke
On average, a regular user of tobacco can go how long between dosages of nicotine?
Depending on how often you've smoked, 30 days or less.
If you can't spell it, don't smoke it.
About a week if you drink plenty of water, but not too much
My uncle tried it and is at 36 years and counting.
smoker or non-smoker, normal blood O2 sat falls w/in 95-100%. anything w/in that range is considered optimal and normal, with the higher the better. depending on the age of the person, how long they smoked, and how heavily they smoked, and as long as there is no disease active process at work (such as diagnosis w/COPD, lung cancer, etc) an optimal level should fall w/in the same range as a non-smoker.
Carbon Monoxide will always be detected in the blood, but after 1-2 days the level will be no different to that of a non-smoker.
Your Screwed Dumba*s
Depending on your amount of body fat, it can stay in your system for thirty days.
Yes, a blood test will detect a smoker. Do not lie on your application, it will only create problems for you in the end. Look for a policy that will accept you as a non-smoker 1 year after the date that you quit. You will need to enlist the aid of a broker to find this as they do not advertise this info and most companies are 2 - 3 years after the issue date of the policy even if you quit smoking 11 months ago.