krazyKemist
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2007
- Messages
- 430
My mom is a smoker, and well she'd like to stop. She tried by herself, with the patches/gum and with Zyban.
The thing is, the patches don't satisfy your need for the gesture.
The Zyban kind of reduced her need to have a smoke, but she was nervous, had palpitations and couldn't sleep anymore.
Today she's seen somebody in a public affairs show demonstrating an "electronic" cigarette. It looks just like a cigarette and is used just like a cigarette. Except it's a metal tube containing a battery and a cartrige filled with a solution of flavored nicotine. When you draw on it, it acts as an inhaler and delivers a mist of nicotine. She would be interested in trying it.
All the stuff I can find out on this is no older than 2008. There are no pubmed hits. There's a warning from WHO that they shouldn't be used as a tobacco-cessation aid (one company had made this claim).
I'm wondering if anybody had heard about this thing or tried it ?
The thing is, the patches don't satisfy your need for the gesture.
The Zyban kind of reduced her need to have a smoke, but she was nervous, had palpitations and couldn't sleep anymore.
Today she's seen somebody in a public affairs show demonstrating an "electronic" cigarette. It looks just like a cigarette and is used just like a cigarette. Except it's a metal tube containing a battery and a cartrige filled with a solution of flavored nicotine. When you draw on it, it acts as an inhaler and delivers a mist of nicotine. She would be interested in trying it.
All the stuff I can find out on this is no older than 2008. There are no pubmed hits. There's a warning from WHO that they shouldn't be used as a tobacco-cessation aid (one company had made this claim).
I'm wondering if anybody had heard about this thing or tried it ?