7/16/2013

There are estimates the seventy percent--over thirty-one million--of America's forty-five million smokers either want to quit or have tried to quit and failed. Giving tobacco up for good is one of the hardest things anyone can ever be expected to do. Giving it up without some sort of stop smoking aids, in other words, going cold turkey, is almost impossible.



If you've decided that you've had enough of your tobacco habit, and are ready to give quitting a shot, don't be afraid to look for help. You'll need help from you family, of curse, who will have to bear with you during the early stages of nicotine withdrawal. But you can look for ways to reduce the severity of your withdrawal symptoms, and make life easier for both yourself and those around you.



The Two Approved Stop Smoking Drugs



The most convenient smoking cessation aid is the stop smoking drug; there are two which have been FDA-approved. The older, Zyban, is actually buproprion and has been marketed as an anti-depressant as Wellbutrin for years. When patients taking Wellbutrin for their depression reported that their nicotine cravings were diminishing, the makers of Wellbutrin developed a form of buproprion to sell as a stop smoking drug. It was the only stop smoking drug with FDA approval until May of 2006.



In May of 2006, after having the FDA fast track their stop smoking drug Chantix, Pfizer introduced it to the market. By stimulating the brain to release small amounts of dopamine, the stop smoking drug fools the nicotine receptors into thinking they are getting nicotine, so the nicotine craving diminishes.



As the stop smoking drug takes over some of the job of nicotine, nicotine cravings diminish, smoking no longer delivers the punch it once did, the smoker smokes less, and the nicotine addiction is weakened even further.



Comparing The Stop Smoking Drugs



Now that Chantix has been available for a year, its long-term statistics can be compared to those of Zyban. After one year 22% those who used the Chantix for the standard twelve week treatment period remained smoke free; for Zyban the one-year success rate is 15% and for nicotine replacement items like gum, patches, and lozenges, the long-term success rate is 10%.



Side effects of the stop smoking drug [http://www.stopsmokingaidsguide.com/Stop_Smoking_Programs/] Chantix include nausea and vomiting, difficulty sleeping and changes in dreams, and changes in the way some foods taste. The stop smoking drug Zyban can produce dry mouth and sleeplessness, and the nicotine replacement treatments may cause throat irritation in the case of lozenges and sprays, and dizziness or headaches in the case of patches.



If you are going to use a stop smoking drug to improve you chances of permanently kicking your nicotine addiction, you will, of course, have to consult you doctor. But whether or not you are interested in the drugs, trying to break an addiction is not something you should undertake without talking to your doctor first.
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