January 19, 2016 - Smoking Cessation Flashcards

1
Q

Harms of Smoking

A

A fuckton

Cancer, cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease, paediatric disease (if smoking while pregnant), and reproductive problems, among many more.

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2
Q

Leading Preventable Cause of Death and Disease

A

Smoking

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3
Q

A Lost Decade

A

Being a smoker reduces your life expectancy by 11-12 years.

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4
Q

Why is it Hard to Quit?

A

Only about 3% of smokers quit annually.

Smoking and getting the nicotine rush stimulates the dopamine pathway in your brain. This is the “reward” pathway that is critical for mood, motivation and attention, and good memory.

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5
Q

Nicotine Withdrawal

A

Begins within hours of stopping smoking, peaks within a few days, and lasts for weeks.

Symptoms of nicotine withdrawal include dysphoria and depressed mood, insomnia, irritability and frustration, anger and anxiety, difficulty concentrating, restlessness, and increased appetite.

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6
Q

Benefits of Quitting Smoking

A

Lung function begins to improve at 3 months

Coronary heart disease risk is reduced by 50% at 1 year

Stroke risk returns to the level of non-smokers in 5 years

Lung cancer risk is 30-50% of that of continuing smokers at 10 years

Cardiovascular heart disease returns to the level of non-smokers at 15 years

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7
Q

Years of Life Gained by Age

A

Regardless of the age the patient quits smoking at, they can expect to add years to their life.

If they quit at 30, they gain about 10 years

If they quit at 40, they gain about 9 years

If they quit at 50, they gain about 6 years

If they quit at 60, they gain about 4 years

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8
Q

Therapies With No Proven Benefit

A

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI)

Laser treatment

Hypnosis

Acupuncture

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9
Q

Unproven Therapies to Quit Smoking

A

E-cigarettes

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10
Q

Proven Therapies for Quitting Smoking

A

1) Counselling is key
2) Pharmacologic aides - bupropion and NRT

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11
Q

The 5 A’s

A

Ask - identify and document tobacco use

Advise - urge the smoker to quit

Assess - is the smoker ready to quit?

Assist - use counselling and pharmacotherapy

Arrange - schedule a follow-up within 1 week of quit date

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12
Q

5 Stages of Change

A

Pre-contemplative

Contemplative

Preparation

Action

Maintenance

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13
Q

Smoking Cessation Pharmacotherapy

A

1st Line - nicotine replacement (NRT), varenicline, and bupropion

2nd Line - Nortyptylline

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14
Q

Varenicline

A

Is a nicotine receptor partial agonist - it stimulates nicotine receptors more weakly than nicotine itself does.

It reduces cravings and decreases the pleasurable effects of smoking.

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15
Q

Bupropion

A

Used as an anti-depressant and a smoking cessation aid.

Roughly doubles the odds of smoking. Re-uptake/inhibition of dopanine/norepinephrine.

Cannot be used with seizures.

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16
Q

Combination Therapy

A

NRT and bupropion can be used in conjunction.