May I ask why 'inhalator' rather than inhaler or vaporiser? (OK, 'vaporiser' wouldn't give as neat a little acronym). It's just that 'inhalator' seems the most medicinal option possible.
Not a supplier or seller as far as I can tell. Appears to be a quitting smoking site that covers all the NRTs. Not sure but I'm thinking that section is about the Nicotrol inhaler rather than PVs.
What is it? It's choice IMHO.Look at an ecig, high, med, low , zero carts. If that isnt cessation what is??
May I ask why 'inhalator' rather than inhaler or vaporiser? (OK, 'vaporiser' wouldn't give as neat a little acronym). It's just that 'inhalator' seems the most medicinal option possible.
I'm confused...the renaming is to distance the product from a cessation device but the name electronic nicotine inhalator implies a medicinal use.
Another seller using this route:
The Nicotine Inhalator - what it is, how it works and how to use safely.
Excerpts:
Doctors recommend that the smoker starts the course by using 6 - 12 cartridges per day for the first 8 weeks. For the following two weeks, the dose is reduced to half that amount, so between 3 - 6 cartridges. In the final two weeks of the course, this second amount is gradually reduced to no cartridges and stopping altogether.
Whilst the inhalator helps the smoker to deal and cope with the physical withdrawal symptoms of not smoking over the 12 week period and it also keeps the smoker's hands busy during this time, so the smoker is left to work on his behavioural dependence of nicotine and find other activities to do in times of stress or anxiety, after food or whilst drinking coffee or socialising.
I fail to see why the word E-Ni can be linked to cessation.
Look at an ecig, high, med, low , zero carts. If that isnt cessation what is??
I was going to call it the EID= Electronic Inhalation Device, but for obvious reasons decided against it..
Im happy with the Wicked E-ID..Sorry the majority dont seem to be.
What is it? It's choice IMHO. I agree completely Angela. Now it sounds more medical than ever before! What were they thinking? Or more to the point... were they thinking at all?
Not trying to be antagonistic here, but I would like to hear your reasoning on this point from my previous post:
Originally Posted by Angela![]()
May I ask why 'inhalator' rather than inhaler or vaporiser? (OK, 'vaporiser' wouldn't give as neat a little acronym). It's just that 'inhalator' seems the most medicinal option possible.
You might check the ingredients a little closer thoughIf you named the E-Ni a turd, I'd vape it!
Is this some e-cig company whose come up with this marketing strategy? I couldn't find a name per se, just lots of anti-smoking, here's-how-to-quit info, and go to the doctor. Then there is a listing of side effects, which I've never experienced. In fact, with regards to one in general - the coughing, that stopped within the first couple of weeks after I was able to cough up all that gunk that's been in my chest due to tobacco cigarettes. Once I coughed up that crud, I could breath better than I have in years. With regards to the nicotine itself, it satisfies my cravings and I can maintain stress levels better now than I did before.
Here are the side effects listed on that page just so everyone can see them:
The main possible side effects that could occur upon using the nicotine inhalator are sore mouth and gums, especially if the maximum amount of cartridges is being used each day.
Other side effects may also be experienced, although they do tend to be quite mild with the inhalator and will probably disappear after a few weeks of continual use.
These include:
If the side effects are particularly severe and do not disappear, you should stop using the inhalator and consult your doctor immediately.
- Nausea
- Vivid dreams
- Aching joints or muscles
- Headaches
- Cough
- Mouth ulcers
- Stomach pains
- Palpitations
I never had sore mouth or gums. Never had nausea, never had vivid dreams (I actually have chronic insomnia but hate the side effects of the sleep-type drugs esp that Ambien. Ugh I hate that one. My doctor tried another though I can't recall the name but it gave me a horrible taste in my mouth 24/7 that never went away so that one didn't last long. The Ambien made me feel drunk or drugged. The rooms felt like they were spinning and I literally had to hold onto something when I got up in the night to go from my bed to the bathroom and back. I swore I'd never take that drug again and I haven't to this day.
Achy joints and muscles is just a daily routine for me so that doesn't count; however, I can add that e-cigs not only allowed me to go to my doctor where he found NO wheezes, crackles, or franks in my lungs, which was the first time in some 20+ years I've had that kind of result. He's thoroughly pleased with the e-cigs and wishes all his smoker patients would use the e-cigs! I also printed out the information from the pulmonologists, oncologists, and other doctors who wrote up information about the safety of the e-cigarettes over tobacco cigarettes. My doctor is among the pro e-cig side of the list because of the effects I had when using it.
Headaches are a normal part of life because I have some light perception. Also, I have migraines but since using the e-cig, I haven't had migraines anymore than usual. I think I've had one, maybe two migraines since starting on the e-cig on July 7th, which again is normal for me as my migraines are chronic but complicated and triggered by loss of vision with some light perception remaining and the possibility that Sjogren's, Lupus, and the medication to slow lupus might be already attacking my eyes as they do attack vital organs but there is no way to know for certain because I have a retinal eye disease that is hereditary.
Stomach pain and palpitations are non-existent. Again, with the cough, that was sort of bad in the beginning but it wasn't the e-cigarette causing me to cough up the crud in my chest; it was the fact that I had stopped the tobacco cigarettes and my body was ridding itself of the tar and other crap put into analog cigarettes that was caught in my lungs.
Since the end of the smoker's cough, the only time I cough now is when my allergies are acting up, which they do because of tree pollen, grass pollen, and household dust. Then there was the scraping and sanding off of the textured ceilings in my house where Dh, my brother, mother's husband, & others were helping to take the textured ceilings out, repair the drywall where needed, then painting the ceilings without the texture. That gave me fits for a while but once I opened all the windows and put that little fan that sits in windows in the room where they worked and turned it so it was an exhaust style fitting, the dust from the scraping and sanding became tolerable.
I've not heard others having these symptoms. I'd be interested to know if others here had the symptoms or not in this claim.
I would disagree with you on that one Jason: have a look at this poll:This place is OBSESSED with medical devices, why dont we all wake up to the fact that in reality it is to 50% of users.