Injection To Stop Smoking
August 20, 2009 by StopSmokingDigest
Filed under Stop Smoking Treatments and Medications
Stop smoking injections enjoy quite some acclaim from different circles. However it’s got some drawbacks too. No body disputes the high performance of this treatment in tackling the smoker’s addictions. It wouldn’t track and blot out the root causes like the fact that stress led you to take up smoking in the first place.
Stop smoking injection are not too hard to find. The good thing is the experts know them by the names. A product like SMARTTM shot is good. The products performance has been tested over time, up to around ten years.
Scopolamine is a good stop smoking injection that you can use. Another one, Atarax is great too. People confidence on these drugs has been boosted because they have been authenticated. These L products have FDA approvals.
Stop smoking injections are normally given once. After that you won’t have to worry about a thing again. Though the story may not be the same for everyone. Some go for the treatment more than once. The important thing is to make sure a doctor is at hand to administer it.
You are your solution to the root causes of smoking habit. Stop smoking injection and other treatments will trash the physical symptoms. But miss the root because lets say the root causes was stress then the solution is self-examination, which only you can do.
It is from scopolamine that SMART is derived. SMART really stands for scopolamine medicated Anti receptor treatment. So it really is scopolamine based. Scopolamine is potent stuff with properties of the seasickness patch.
Atarax are stop-smoking injection treatment. But the name is more like a brand. It’s really anti histamine. It shares so much in common with benadryl.
When a stop smoking injection is shot on the patient the treatment need to be progressive. After the first shots the two weeks that follow can be used to administer medication and the scopolamine patch. The chance a scopolamine succeeding is put at 70% to 80% while the patch can achieve 20%.
You will need doctors for your stop smoking injection. You need them for administration of scopolamine and the patches. But you also need them to medically examine you before you even undertake the treatment. More so, if there is other related medical issues and concerns.
The reports about the success of stop smoking shots differ. Some put the success rate at 40% others put it at 80%. Some just feel more work needs to be carried out by researchers in this area. I think so too.

