FREE SHIPPING To United States
All products and operations are monitored by highly skilled,
registered pharmacists
in order to ensure a high quality service!
ATTENTION: CUSTOMERS

Please be advised that there are currently significant Customs Processing Delays at JFK, NY and Newark, NJ ports of entry.

Please allow plenty of time when placing your orders. During the holiday season, we expect international and domestic postal service delays due to higher demands on the postal network. It is important that you receive your medications, so please be mindful and consider ordering in advance to allow for potential disruptions & delays.

Shipping delays due to Covid-19 Virus

Please fill the form to receive updates when we can ship your order.

Your Country: ?
Your Currency: ?

Stop Smoking

Our Generics-Stop Smoking medications contain cost-effective generic alternatives to branded medicines to help you stop smoking by removing your dependence on nicotine and reducing withdrawal symptoms. 

You can search for the product you want using the search box, by entering either the active ingredient, e.g. bupropion or the product name, e.g. Bupron.

Why is cigarette smoking addictive?

Cigarettes contain many toxic chemicals that are drawn into your lungs each time you drag on a cigarette and can seriously damage your health.  Cigarette smoking has been linked to heart disease, stroke, and cancer.

However, it is the nicotine in cigarettes that is the addictive chemical.  Nicotine is a natural pesticide found in the tobacco plant.  It very poisonous and one of the most addictive known drugs.  When nicotine is inhaled into your lungs in cigarette smoke, it is rapidly absorbed into the blood and reaches the brain within seconds.  The effects of nicotine are immediate.  You will feel an adrenaline rush, as it stimulates adrenaline release from the adrenal glands.  In the brain, nicotine stimulates the release of the neurotransmitter dopamine, a brain chemical that allows nerve cells to communicate.  Dopamine is often referred to as the “feel good” hormone as it is released when the reward circuit is activated.  Dopamine creates a feeling of pleasure and relaxation when activated by a pleasurable activity like eating or sex.  The amount of dopamine released by a drug like nicotine is much greater.  It creates a feeling of euphoria, leading to the desire to repeat the feeling, which soon becomes a need and is the start of an addiction. 

Withdrawal symptoms

If you continue to smoke, you will gradually need more and more nicotine to get the same effect.  If you stop smoking, once you are nicotine dependent, you will suffer from unpleasant withdrawal symptoms.  These include physical symptoms like sweating, tremor, increased pulse rate (tachycardia), and nausea; also, emotional symptoms like anxiety, irritability, confusion, depression, and insomnia.  

How do medicines work to help you quit smoking?

Medications to help you quit smoking work by helping you break the addiction for nicotine and reducing the withdrawal symptoms while you stop smoking.  They include:

Varenicline

Varenicline has a similar structure to nicotine.  It binds to the same receptors that nicotine binds to, which are the nicotinic acetylcholine receptors.  These receptors stimulate dopamine release, but varenicline produces a much weaker response so that the reward effect and the craving are both gradually reduced. 

Bupropion

Bupropion is an antidepressant that helps break the addiction created by nicotine dependence and works by increasing the amount of dopamine in the brain without the need for nicotine.  Bupropion blocks the reuptake of dopamine from the nerve cells that release it, which prolongs the time that dopamine is active in the brain.

Read more
What is this ?
Please select your country to display all the products we are able to supply to you.
What is this ?
Select the currency that you would like to display the prices in. This will be the currency that appears on your credit card statement.
 

This website uses cookies. View our policy and select your preferences here