Examples
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| nortriptyline | Aventyl, Pamelor |
Although the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has
not approved nortriptyline for use in smoking cessation, the Tobacco Use and
Dependence Clinical Practice Guideline Panel of the U.S. Public Health Service
recommends it as a second-choice medicine for this use.1
The preferred medicines to help you quit smoking
are bupropion, varenicline, and nicotine replacement therapy.
How It Works
Exactly how nortriptyline works to help
people quit smoking is not known. Doctors normally use nortriptyline to treat
depression. But its action in helping people quit
smoking is different from its antidepressant action. You do not have to have
depression for nortriptyline to help you stop smoking.
Why It Is Used
Doctors prescribe nortriptyline to
help people quit smoking if they have not been able to quit by using
first-choice medicines (nicotine replacement therapy, varenicline, and
bupropion hydrochloride). It is not a first-choice medicine because it is more
likely than these other medicines to cause side effects.
Nortriptyline should not be used during pregnancy unless the woman has
not been able to quit smoking without medicine, the first-choice medicines have
not been successful, and the benefits outweigh the risk for harm to the
fetus.2
How Well It Works
Nortriptyline doubles your chances of quitting smoking. It is just as
effective as other medicines to help people quit smoking.3
Using nortriptyline and nicotine replacement therapy
at the same time may work better for some people than using nicotine
replacement therapy alone.
Side Effects
Side effects occur in 64% to 78% of
people who use nortriptyline. The most common are dry mouth and
sleepiness.1
Other common side effects
include:1
- Lightheadedness.
- Urinary
retention.
- Shaky hands.
- Blurred vision.
The most serious side effect of nortriptyline is irregular
heartbeat (arrhythmia). Therefore, it should be used with extreme
caution in people who have heart disease.
An overdose of
nortriptyline can result in death.
FDA Advisory. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued an
advisory on antidepressant medicines and the risk of
suicide. The FDA does not recommend that people stop using these medicines.
Instead, a person taking antidepressants should be watched for
warning signs of suicide. This is especially important
at the beginning of treatment or when the doses are changed.
See
Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug Reference is not
available in all systems.)
What To Think About
Start taking nortriptyline 10 to
28 days before your quit date, and continue the medicine for 12 weeks after
quitting smoking.
Complete the new medication information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?) to help you understand this medication.