Nicotine Replacement Therapy - Best Tips
Quit Smoking Products- Nicotine Replacement Therapy
Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) is the use of various
forms of nicotine delivery methods intended to replace nicotine
obtained from smoking or other tobacco usage. These products
are intended for use in smoking cessation efforts to help deal
with withdrawal symptoms and cravings caused by the loss of
nicotine from cigarettes. Several forms of NRT have been
marketed, including the nicotine patch, inhaler, nasal spray,
gum, sublingual tablet, and lozenge. NRT is thought to be
useful and beneficial for tobacco users who want to quit their
addiction and is for most people perfectly safe. Cigarettes on
the other hand cause the early deaths of about 5 million people
each year. These people are not killed by the nicotine in the
cigarette, but by other constituents of tobacco smoke such as
Carbon Monoxide and tars. It is the nicotine that keeps the
smoker addicted. Cigarettes can be viewed as a "dirty" and
dangerous method of delivering nicotine, while NRT is a "clean"
and safe method.
NRT delivers nicotine to the smoker's brain in a much slower
way than cigarettes do. It helps to damp down the urges to
smoke that most smokers have in the early days and weeks after
quitting, rather than remove them totally. It gives the smoker
the chance to break smoking cues in their daily lives, and
might provide a more comfortable exit from the smoking habit.
NRT however is best used with some form of support, ideally
from someone who knows something about smoking cessation.
In 2005 the Committee on the Safety of Medicines recommended
that NRT be given to pregnant smokers and also to adolescent
smokers. However, in the opinion of many independent nicotine
researchers, the Committee on the Safety of Medicines has got
its new advice on NRT dramatically wrong. Tobacco researchers
who have received funding from the pharmaceutical industry have
acted as consultants to the Committee.
Ginzel et al. reviewed the dangers of nicotine for the
developing brain. Recent diversification of nicotine products
and their placement on the free market are solely in the
interest of industry and will not help to reduce youth smoking,
but could serve as a gateway drug for nonsmokers. The
recommendation of ASH to use NRT even without stopping smoking
will create dependencies on both cigarettes and NRT (used
simultaneously or alternating), again in the interest of
industry only. Family doctors will be appropriately cautious
about prescribing a drug that is a poison and carries many
potential dangers to the foetus and adolescent smokers and
indeed to all smokers who use NRT and yet continue to smoke
tobacco.
A small number of people who use NRT, especially Nasal Spray
and Nicotine Gum, will go on to use it on a longer term basis.
These are usually highly nicotine dependent smokers who would
not have been able to quit without the help of such medication.
There is currently no evidence that such long term usage is
harmful to health, especially when compared to smoking.
Findings from a recent Cochrane review of controlled trials
testing NRT products ndicated that smokers using NRT were 1.5
to 2 times more likely to be abstinent from smoking at followup
than those in the placebo or control treatment condition.
However, this statement is controversial, and critics have
pointed out that real-world trials rather than artificial ones
yield results for NRT that are hardly better than those
obtained for non-NRT controls. Quit Smoking Now 
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