Examples
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| clonidine | Catapres |
Clonidine is available by prescription in pill or patch
form.
Clonidine has not been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) for use in helping people to quit smoking. However, the
Tobacco Use and Dependence Clinical Practice Guideline Panel of the U.S. Public
Health Service recommends it as a second-choice medication for this
use.1
The preferred medications to help you quit smoking are bupropion,
varenicline, and nicotine replacement therapy.
How It Works
Doctors normally use clonidine to treat high blood pressure. In
some people, it reduces the craving for cigarettes. It is not entirely
understood how clonidine does this.
Although clonidine is not normally used as a first-choice
medication for smoking cessation, some people find it calms them when they are
dealing with tobacco
withdrawal symptoms.
Why It Is Used
Doctors prescribe clonidine for people who want to quit smoking but
cannot take the first-choice medications (bupropion, varenicline, and nicotine
replacement therapy) or have not been able to quit smoking by using those
medications.2
How Well It Works
People using clonidine were twice as likely
to be successful at quitting smoking as people who were not using any
medication.1
Side Effects
The most common side effects of clonidine include:
- Dry mouth (occurs in 40% of
users).
- Drowsiness (33%).
- Dizziness
(16%).
- Sleepiness (10%).
- Constipation (10%).
The clonidine patch may irritate the skin.
Clonidine lowers blood pressure, so monitor your blood pressure
while you are taking this medication. It can also cause depression. Low blood
pressure may occur if you sit or stand up quickly (postural or
orthostatic hypotension).
Suddenly stopping the use of clonidine can cause side effects.
These effects include nervousness, agitation, headache, confusion, and tremor
along with a sudden rise in blood pressure (rebound hypertension). You can
avoid this by slowly decreasing clonidine over 2 to 4 days.
See Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug Reference
is not available in all systems.)
What To Think About
Side effects can limit clonidine's usefulness for helping people
quit smoking. It often has more side effects than other medicines used to help
people quit smoking.1
You begin using clonidine 3 to 4 days before your quit date to
build up the level of medicine in your body. You use the patch for up to 10
weeks.
You will change the clonidine patch weekly.
Complete the
new medication information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?)
to help you understand this medication.