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Celecoxib

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

Celecoxib (sel-eh-KOX-ib)
Brand Name
Celebrex
Type of Drug
Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
drug (NSAID).
Prescribed For
Osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, acute pain, some colon polyps (FAR), menstrual pain, and arthritis of the spine (ankylosing spondylitis).
General Information
Traditional NSAIDs work primarily by blocking the effects of COX-2, a body enzyme that plays an important role in regulating pain and inflammation. But these NSAIDs also have an unwanted effect: They interfere with cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-1), a related enzyme that helps to maintain the stomach’s protective lining. NSAIDs that block the effects of this enzyme may produce side effects such as stomach irritation, gas, and stomach ulcers.
COX-2 inhibitors such as celecoxib are a class of NSAIDs that work about as well as the older NSAIDs. In fact, both 200 mg a day and 400 mg a day of celecoxib work as well as naproxen 500 mg twice a day. They interfere primarily with COX-2, leaving the stomach-protecting COX-1 relatively unaffected. This means that COX-2 inhibitor NSAIDs can relieve pain and inflammation just like traditional NSAIDs but are less likely to cause gastrointestinal (GI) side effects. Another advantage of celecoxib is that it does not cause thinning of the blood or affect blood platelets as can happen with older NSAIDs. Celecoxib is broken down in the liver.
Black patients absorb about 40% more celecoxib than Caucasians; its importance is unclear. Celecoxib is the first drug proven effective in reducing the number of intestinal polyps in people with the rare genetic disorder FAR
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take celecoxib if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients or to sulfa drugs. NSAIDs should not be taken by people with asthma or by those who have had a” allergic reaction to aspirin or another NSA13.1hey can develop a group of sympWMS V1Jnny nose with or without nasal polyps and a severe bronchial spasm) known as the aspirin triad.
COX-2 inhibitors, including celecoxib, have been associated with high blood pressure, kidney damage, heart attacks, and stroke. It should not be used to treat pain associated with heart bypass surgery. Two other COX-2 inhibitors were taken off the market because of safety concerns. Rofecoxib was removed because safety issues were noted after people had taken it for 18 months or more. Valdecoxib was taken off the market because of the lack of safety data, severe skin rashes, and concerns raised in people taking the drug after having had heart surgery.
NSAIDs can cause GI bleeding and ulcers and stomach perforation. This can occur at any time, with or without warning, in people who take NSAIDs regularly. Celecoxib should be used with caution by people who have had stomach ulcers or GI bleeding. Minor upper GI problems, such as upset stomach, are common and may occur at any time during NSAID therapy. People who develop bleeding or ulcers and continue NSAID treatment should be aware of the risk of developing more serious side effects. Risk of GI bleeding and ulcers is increased with longer duration of therapy as well as treatment with oral corticosteroids and anticoagulants, smoking, alcoholism, older age, and general poor health.
Children taking celecoxib may be more likely to vomit blood, suffer acute kidney failure, or develop rashes.
Celecoxib has not been studied in people with severe kidney disease. They should not use this drug unless their doctors closely monitor their kidney function.
Celecoxib can cause liver irritation and should be used with caution by people with hepatitis or cirrhosis. People with moderate liver disease can have twice as much celecoxib in their blood and require a reduced dosage. The effect of celecoxib in people with severe liver failure is not known.
Possible Side Effects
Side effects are similar to those of traditional NSAIDs. Stomach and intestinal side effects are about half as common.
♦    Most common: headache.
✓    Common: diarrhea, upset stomach, sinus irritation, and respiratory infection.
♦    Less common: abdominal pain, gas, nausea, back pain, swelling in the legs m arms, accidental injuries, sleeplessness, dizziness, sore throat, runny nose, and rash.
✓    Rare: Rare side effects can occur in almost any part of the body. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
Drug Interactions
•    Alcohol may increase the risk of serious GI-related side ef-
fects. Avoid alcohol.
•    Combining celecoxib with an aluminum and magnesium antacid slightly reduces the amount of drug absorbed. Separate doses of these antacids and celecoxib by 1-2 hours.
•    Fluconazole and lithium may raise celecoxib blood levels and increase the risk of side effects.
•    While celecoxib may be combined with low dosages of as-
pirin, taking these drugs together can increase the risk of
stomach or intestinal ulcers or other complications. The ulcer
risk associated with this combination is less than that posed
by single-drug therapy with a traditional NSAID.
•    Celecoxib can reduce the blood-pressure-lowering effect of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and diuretic drugs. This combination can also increase the risk of kidney damage after chronic celecoxib use.
•    Celecoxib may affect lithium blood levels.
•    NSAIDS can reduce the effect of furosemide and thiazidetype diuretics.
•    Celecoxib should be used cautiously with warfarin. Concurrent use of these drugs may cause an increased risk of bleeding complications.
Food Interactions
Celecoxib can be taken without regard to Food or meals. For optimal effectiveness, avoid taking this drug with high-fat meals.
Usual Dose
Adult (age 18 and over): arthritis-100-200 mg once or twice a day. FAP-400 mg twice a day.
Child (age 2 and over): juvenile rheumatoid arthritis-22-55 lbs: 50 mg twice a day; over 55 lbs: 100 mg twice a day.
Child (under age 2): not recommended.
Overdosage
Overdosage symptoms include Mnargy, drowsiness, nausea, vomitiR(;, 16M Stomach pain. Stomach or intestinal bleeding or severe allergic reactions can occur. High blood pressure, kidney failure, breathing difficulties, and coma are rare.
The victim should be taken to a hospital emergency room. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Call your doctor if you develop rash, itching, unexplained weight gain, nausea, fatigue, jaundice (yellowing of the skin or whites of the eyes), flu-like symptoms, lethargy, swelling, black stools, severe stomach pain, persistent headache, or any bothersome or persistent side effect.
If you forget a dose and remember within 1 or 2 hours of your scheduled time, take it right away. If you do not remember until later, skip the forgotten dose and continue with your regular schedule.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: celecoxib has caused birth defects in animal studies. Any NSAID may affect fetal heart development during the second half of pregnancy. Pregnant women should not take celecoxib without their doctor’s approval. When this drug is considered crucial by your doctor, its potential benefits must be carefully weighed against its risks.
NSAIDs may pass into breast milk. There is a possibility that a nursing mother taking celecoxib could affect her baby’s heart or cardiovascular system. Nursing mothers who must take this drug should use infant formula.
Seniors: Generally, seniors can take this drug without special precaution. Those who weigh less than 110 lbs. should begin with the lowest possible dosage.

Bisphosphonates

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Bisphosphonates (bis-FOS-fun-ates)
Brand Names
Alendronate Sodium Fosamax
Alendronate Sodium  Cholecalciferol Fosamax Plus D
Etidronate Disodium (9 Didronel
lbandronate Sodium Boniva
Risedronate Sodium 91 Ar.Wm~
Risedronate Sodium  Calcium Carbonate Actonel with Calcium
Tiludronate Disodium Skelid
Prescribed For
Prevention and treatment of osteoporosis (a condition characterized by loss of bone mass due to calcium depletion) in postmenopausal women and in older men; Paget’s disease of bone; and high blood calcium associated with high dosages of corticosteroid treatments and cancer.
General Information
Bisphosphonates have been used for many years to treat a variety of conditions associated with low bone mass caused by calcium depletion. They work on cells called osteoclasts that normally break down bone tissue, making bones stronger by preventing loss of bone mass. In osteoporosis, bones become weak and brittle, increasing the risk of spine, hip, and other bone fractures that are a major cause of death and disability in older women. Etidronate has been used occasionally in children, but these drugs generally are not considered safe for use in children.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not use any bisphosphonate if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients.
Do not use bisphosphonates if you have severe kidney disease or active stomach or intestinal disease such as difficulty swallowing, ulcers, or stomach irritation. Notify your doctor if you experience any gastrointestinal problems while taking bisphosphonates.
Osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ), a condition in which bones of the jaw lose their blood supply and eventually collapse, has been reported in people treated with bisphosphonates. Most cases of ONJ have been in cancer patients having dental procedures such as tooth extractions. People at risk may be those with cancer and those taking corticosteroids or those with poor oral hygiene.
Do not use ibandronate, alendronate, or risedronate it you cannot stand or sit upright for 30 minutes (see “Special Information”).
Bisphosphonates can cause low blood calcium and should not be used by people whose blood calcium is already low.
Bisphosphonates can cause severe and sometimes incapaciating bone,    muscle pain.
Possible Side Effects
Side effects are generally mild and similar to those reported by people taking an inactive placebo (sugar pill).
Possible Side Effects (continued)
Alendronate
♦    Most common: pain.
✓    Common: abdominal pain and discomfort, gas, stomach ulcers, and back pain.
✓    Less common: upset stomach, constipation, diarrhea, nausea, difficulty swallowing, muscle pain, headache, flu-like symptoms, accidents, and swelling in the arms or legs.
♦    Rare: vomiting and changes in taste. Contact your doctor it you experience any side effect not listed above.
Etidronate
✓    Most common: fever.
✓    Common: nausea, excess fluids, and flu-like symptoms.
♦    Less common: convulsions, constipation, inflammation of the lining of the mouth, changes in liver function, low blood levels of magnesium or phosphate, breathing difficulties, and changes in sense of taste.
✓    Rare: allergic reactions. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
lbandronate
✓    Most common: upper respiratory infection, back pain, bronchitis, and upset stomach.
♦    Common: arm or leg pain, muscle pain, headache, pneumonia, and urinary infections.
✓    Less common: dizziness, fainting, pain due to nerve lesions, weakness, allergic reactions, diarrhea, vomiting, dental problems, stomach pain, low blood cholesterol, joint problems, arthritis, and sore throat.
✓    Rare: eye problems have occurred with other drugs in this group but not with ibandronate. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
Risedronate
✓    Most common:    qlaftea, abdominal pain, rash, and severe joint pain.
✓    Common: chest pain, dizziness, swelling in the arms or legs, constipation, nausea, sinus irritation, and bone pain.
✓    Less common: leg cramps, weakness, bronchitis, poor vision in one eye, dry eyes, ringing or buzzing in the ears, Possible Side Effects (continued)
parathyroid gland problems, infection, rash and other skin problems, tooth problems, and vitamin D deficiency.
♦    Rare: fatigue and drug reactions, including swelling of the
tongue and throat with difficulty breathing, generalized rash,
and some blisters. Contact your doctor if you experience
any side effect not listed above.
Tiludronate
♦    Most common: diarrhea and nausea.
✓    Common: headache, upset stomach, respiratory infection, runny nose, fluid in the lungs, and sinus irritation.
✓    Less common: vomiting, dizziness, tingling in the hands or feet, coughing, sore throat, gas, aches and pains, cataracts, eye redness, glaucoma, rash, skin disorders, tooth problems, swelling, infection, vitamin D deficiency, and muscle aches.
♦    Rare: tiredness, high blood pressure, fainting, appetite loss, constipation, abdominal pain, and sleeplessness. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
Drug Interactions
•    Antacids, calcium, and iron-containing supplements and foods can interfere with the absorption of bisphosphonates. Separate doses of these drugs and foods and a bisphosphonate by at least 30 minutes.
•    Separate doses of tiludronate and aluminum-containing antacids by 1 hour.
•    Aspirin can interfere with the absorption of tiludronate.
•    Indomethacin can increase the amount of tiludronate absorbed into the blood by 2-4 times.
•    Bisphosphonates may increase the gastrointestinal-irritating effects of aspirin, ibuprofen, and other NSAWDs.
•    Drugs that reduce the amount of stomach acid, including ranitidine, cimetidine, and omeprazole, may increase the amount of ibandronate in the blood, but the degree of increase is not clinically important.
•    Etidronate may affect the action of warfarin.
•    Bisphosphonates reduce the ability of teriparatide to build new bone.

Food Interactions
Take these medicines with plain water. Food and drink—even mineral water, orange juice, or coffee—interfere with the absorption of these drugs. Take alendronate or risedronate every morning at least 30 minutes before eating, drinking, or taking other medications. Etidronate should be taken on an empty stomach 2 hours before a meal. lbandronate should be taken as soon as you wake up and 1 hour before you eat or take any other medications, vitamins, or supplements. Tiludronate should be taken when you first wake up; wait 4 hours before eating breakfast.
Usual Dose
Alendronate
10-40 mg a day; or 35-75 mg once weekly. not recommended.
Alendronate + Calcium
70 mg/2800 IU once weekly. not recommended.
Etidronate
up to 4.5 mg per lb. a day to start, gradually increasing to no more than 9 mg per lb. per day.
not recommended.
lbandronate
2.5 mg.once a day: or one 150 mg tablet once a month. not recommended.
Risedronate
5-30 mg a day; or 35 mg once weekly. not recommended.
Tiludronate
400 mg a day.
not recommended.
Overdosage
Little is known about the effeckS,zA USP*nosphonate overdose.
Other symptoms include upset stomach, heartburn, ulcer, and irritation of the esophagus. Milk or antacids may reverse these effects. These drugs can irritate the esophagus. Do not let the victim lie down or vomit. Overdose victims should be taken to a hospital emergency room. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Food interferes with the effectiveness of these drugs. Carefully follow the directions in “Food Interactions” above.
Do not suck on any of these tablets or allow them to dissolve in your mouth because they can cause mouth sores.
To reduce the risk of stomach and throat irritation, do not lie down for at least 30 minutes after taking alendronate or risedronate. Do not lie down for 60 minutes after taking ibandronate.
Separate doses of calcium, iron, and vitamin D supplements from those of a bisphosphonate by at least 2 hours. If you forget a dose, take it as soon as you remember. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the dose you forgot and continue with your regular schedule. If you forget a morning dose and take it later in the day, you must still follow the instructions in “Food Interactions” about avoiding food.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: Bisphosphonates cause abnormal bone development in animal fetuses and are toxic to pregnant animals. When any of these drugs is considered crucial by your doctor, its potential benefits must be carefully weighed against its risks.
It is not known if bisphosphonates pass into breast milk. Since these drugs affect bone formation, nursing mothers who must take a bisphosphonate should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors may use these drugs without special restriction.

HEADACHES AND MIGRAINES

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

HEADACHES AND MIGRAINES
• Take aspirin or acetaminophen for an occasional tension headache
• Don’t overuse headache medication
• Consult a doctor if headaches are frequent or severe
• Experiment with riboflavin or feverfew for natural migraine prevention
• Try acupuncture treatments to reduce migraine frequency
• Treat a migraine as early as possible
• Use Excedrin Migraine for mild migraines ****
• Ask your doctor about a W Aan for more severe
• Discuss topiramate (Topamax) with your MD if you suffer frequent migraines
• Prevent menstrual migraines with NSAIDs
• Prevent sex headaches with NSAIDs
Headaches are extraordinarily common,number seven on the list of reason-, why people see their doctor taking of wellbutrin xl and zoloft . It is estimated that 45 million people suffer from ChTonic’head pain cortico steroids negatively affect male testosterone .That doesn’t begin to include those who have occasional headaches zyprexa quick dissolve . Yet for all that, the exact causes of head pain are not all that clear hydroxyzine pamoate and faq .
According to Joel Saper, MD, director of the Michigan Head Pain and Neurological Institute, the brain itself doesn’t feel pain premarin hair loss . That’s why neurosurgeons can operate on the brain tissue while a patient is wide awake carbatrol kidney . So, a headache isn’t exactly the result of pain in the brain direction flomax taking . We perceive head pain that may originate from the scalp, the skull, or the coverings of the brain buspar wiki . Muscles and nerves in the neck can also create discomfort that is perceived as a headache buying valtrex .
An occasional mild headache does not usually pose a serious problem prilosec and bone loss . But a more severe headache, even if it occurs only once in a while, or a chronic headache, even if it is not extremely painful, deserves medical evaluation terazosin cns distribution . Popping a couple of aspirin or acetaminophen pills just isn’t a good idea when the headache occurs several times a week prevacid gastroesophageal reflux diease . In fact, Dr maxalt and high blood pressure . Saper says that using such over-the-counter (OTC) analgesics too frequently can actually cause the headaches you’re trying to treat who makes cytoxan . It takes an experienced headache doctor to help someone out of such a vicious cycle imuran and pancytopenia .
I have suffered from headaches all my life zovirax solution dosing information . For the past 30 years, I’ve taken from 25 to 35 aspirins daily, in addition to sinus medication creative and lithium batteries . My doctor doesn’t know about these large doses, but regular checkups reveal no damage to my liver or kidneys levothyroxine at night .
The trouble is that many physicians are not aware of how serious this problem can be dissolving penicillin powder . John Edmeads, MD, editorializing in the journal Headache, noted that “the daily use (or, more accurately, abuse) of analgesics actually worsened and perpetuated headaches,” He bemoaned the fact that so few physicians “know that chronic analgesic abuse causes chronic headaches natural viagra alternative review .”328
The diagnostic dilemma for doctors is that they must distinguish between headaches brought on by overuse of pain relievers, headaches caused by some other medical condition, and headaches caused by a change in brain chemistry buy wellbutrin 300 xl . If the headache is a consequence of an underlying condition like the flu, it will go away when the infection runs its course equate gas relief with infant motrin . Celiac disease is one condition that can cause recurrent headaches, among many other symptoms, although the underlying issue is actually a reaction to gluten in the small intestine side effects from ramipril tablets .The treatment is to avoid any foods that contain gluten (wheat, barley, and rye) prednisone and lysodren for do .
I suffered from migraine headaches for more than 10 years topamax side eftects . I saw several neurologists, but my intense headaches forced me to take early retirement viagra chemist nottingham .
In the fall 02002, 1 went from three headaches a week to almost nonstop compare prices nexium . That November, I had only 3 days without headaches fun facts about lithium . I took migraine meds like Frova, Maxalt, and Imitrex, but I mostly lay in bed in a dark room my doctor prescribed .3 premarin .
I was at my wit’s end fsh estradiol fertility . Then illy family doctor suggested a gluten-free diet viagra in india by mail order . Gradually my headaches became less frequent and after several months I was 98 percent headache-free buy famvir . I feel I have been given a new life!
Caffeine Withdrawal Headache
By now, many people recognize that daily use of caffeine can lead to a dependence on it zoloft stuffed animal . Stopping the caffeine—for example, by not drinking coffee on the weekends—can lead to a caffeine withdrawal headache, accompanied by irritability and fatigue plavix and diclofenac sodium contraindications . Probably the best way to deal with this type of headache in the short term is to get a little caffeine buy 200 mg generic lamotrigine . In the longer term, though, a more gradual withdrawal from coffee, soda, or caffeine-containing medications will allow a person to drop the use of the drug without the wicked headache hydrochlorothiazide and libido .
Q lamictal and weekness . 1 am a healthy person and rarely take any medicine loow priced nexium . I quit smoking 14 months ago and am trying to stop drinking coffee lithium polymer battery hyperion . Lately I’ve had trouble with fatigue and on headaches in the afternoon sarafem directons on usage . If I take Extra Strength Excedrin with a Coke on my break, the headache goes away like magic brethine licensing . Regular aspirin doesn’t work as well using hibiclens while on accutane . Why is Excedrin more effective?
A actos sales 2005 . Each Extra Strength Excedrin contains aspirin (250 mg), acetaminophen (250 mg), and 65 mg of caffeine lotrel drug interactions . That means that a standard two-caplet dose will pro-vide you with 130 mg of caffeine what is element lithium used for . Together with your cola, this probably provides as much caffeine as two mugs of coffee dangerous testosterone supplements .
It is conceivable that your afternoon slump and headaches are due to caffeine withdrawal finasteride 2 . People who customarily drink as little as 21/2 cups of coffee can experience symptoms such as lethargy, headache, and anxiety when they stop jaw necrosis actonel .
By taking a pain reliever that contains caffeine, you could be easing your withdrawal college pharmacy sublingual testosterone . An alternate solution is to try to reduce your caffeine intake gradually until you are completely weaned symptoms of prednisone overdose .
Tension Headache
Experts used to pigeonhole headaches into separate categories: tension headache, sinus headache, migraine, and so forth 18 takes viagra . While some categories may be useful, the separations between them have blurred should procardia be taken with food . Trying to tell a tension headache from a migraine is not for amateurs trileptal medication .
Although tension headaches are said to be far more common than migraines, much of the research lately has focused on migraine prevention and treatment oily skin returned accutane . How should you handle recurrent tension headaches, then?
As long as the headache does not occur more often than once a week, there is no problem with using the regular OTC headache pills or powders fsh levels decrease taking clomid .These may contain aspirin, acetaminophen, or a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), usually ibuprofen took motrin while pregnant . All of these have been shown to ease headache pain minoxidil vs propecia . For this type of occasional use, the only reason to prefer one instead of another is based on your own experience of pain relief testimonials of zithromax healing polymyositis . If aspirin doesn’t seem to help but Tylenol does, go with the acetaminophen—and vice versa serum depakote level lab test .
Adding caffeine to the analgesic may help it work better side effects of soma . You can buy a pill that already contains caffeine, or you could take your aspirin, acetaminophen, or ibuprofen with iced tea or a cup of coffee what happens if you snort amitriptyline .
Readers have suggested a few unique approaches that might be worth consideration, though we don’t have any good evidence that they work blurred vision cymbalta . They are, at least, inexpensive and low risk and will not perpetuate headache even if someone gets carried away and uses them too often interpret ir spectra of caffeine .
People have tried applying a dab of peppermint oil to the forehead cheap depakote . Others have put Vicks VapoRub on their temples diovan hair loss . Using Vicks for a headache is strictly an “off label” use, just like so many of the other creative uses people have invented for VapoRub increasing amoxicillin dosage during . It contains menthol as one of its ingredients-, peppermint oil also contains menthol pseudoephedrine overdose symptoms . We’re not aware that menthol has special properties to help ease headaches, but it has been shown to alleviate the pain of sore muscles tadalafil generic . Perhaps it is doing something similar fora tension headache cialis western open .
I have enjoyed your columns about Vicks VapoRub fora variety of uses diflucan prescription without . Here’s one you may not have heard before clindamycin diarreah . A friend had a headache that would not go away testosterone levels in childhood . I told her to rub a dab of Vicks on her forehead prochlorperazine for migraines . She thought I was nuts, but it worked effexor success . She has been using it ever since cialis tadalafil tablets .
Some headache specialists have used relaxation training for people who suffer from chronic or recurrent headaches cymbalta use with bipolar disorder . This can help individuals who are willing to practice the technique, including teenagers who have frequent headaches at school singulair patent expiration .121
One very important point for people who suffer frequent Aspirin
Plain old generic aspirin, 650 milligrams (two tablets), will ease the pain of an occasional tension headache in most cases quitting seroquel . The danger is if the headache becomes more frequent crushed ibuprofen . Aspirin overuse increases the possibility of stomach irritation or ulcers and can also be associated with “rebound headache ibuprofen and miscarriage .” Regularly using aspirin (or acetaminophen) at least 2 days B week may increase the risk that the headache will become chronic because of the medication prozac works grat .
Side effects: Digestive tract upset, including ulcers Downside: People who are allergic to aspirin must avoid it completely itraconazole estrogenic effects .
Cost: Inexpensive, about 5 cents a dose aygestin in uterine bleeding . More if you buy a brand name misoprostol monograph .
headaches of any sort: Overusing pain relievers can actually cause chronic headache d nolvadex . This is a very difficult problem to handle alone, so a person who is using painkillers for a headache more than 2 days a week on a regular basis should get help from a headache specialist wellbutrin for adult adhd add .
Migraine Headache
Experts estimate that 28 million to 30 million Americans suffer from migraines pentoxifylline description .330 Many more migraine sufferers are women than men evista and cervical cancer . As we have pointed out, trying to distinguish between a migraine headache and some other cause of head pain is generally a job for an expert risperdal herb interactions . Usually, though, if the headache is accompanied by exceptional sensitivity to light or noise or by nausea, or if it is preceded by an aura of flashing lights or blind spots, a person should be evaluated for migraine effexor and monopoly . Other tip-offs might be pain on just one side of the head or pain that throbs, especially when you move soma holiday cd greenwheel .
We tend to think of migraines as crushingly painful can lasix hurt you . That’s not always the case response to accutane . But if it is a migraine, there are ways to treat it that should help get the pain under control, whether it is simply annoying or completely incapacitating cheap fluoxetine online order fluoxetine now .
Q tylenol and motrin interaction . 1 am 20 years old and have suffered with severe headaches for as long as I can remember wellbutrin and neurontin . Recently I asked my doctor about them, and he told me as long as / could stop them with an OTC pain medicine / shouldn’t worry about them migraine treatment natural imitrex .
/ am concerned about the frequency of the headaches and the fact that the pain is always on the left side of my head buy cheap generic prilosec . / suffer from at least one a week, usually more keflex suspension flavor . Which pain reliever is best?
A diflucan and nystatin and comparison . Please check in with a headache center alcohol and ampicillin . A one-sided headache could be a symptom of migraine premature ejaculation trazodone . If that is your problem, a prescription migraine medication might be helpful superiority of ofloxacin over ciprofloxacin .
According to Joel Saper, MD, one of the country’s leading experts on headache, using any OTC pain reliever more than 2 days a week might aggravate the problem by causing rebound headaches clomid out of system .
MIGRAINE TRIGGERS
Alcohol (including but not limited to red wine)
Aspartame (found in many “light” sugar-free foods) Caffeine withdrawal
Chocolate
MSG (monosodium glutamate, found in many processed foods, including peanuts)
Nitrates (found in processed meats like hot dogs and salami)
Tyramine (found in aged cheese, chocolate, nuts, sour cream, and yogurt)
0 0 0
If you are diagnosed with migraines, you will want to know what stimuli jump-start them so you can avoid them to the extent possible apri stock pick free high rollers . The migraine-prone brain likes to have a certain amount of routine avalide eps manchester . Disrupted sleep, dehydration, missed meals, secondhand smoke, perfume, and a number of different foods or ingredients are common triggers medication lawsuits norvasc . 33 1 Keeping a headache diary is a good way to figure out what things get your migraine going avodart diflucan . In it, you record details like meals, exercise, sleep schedule, and so forth, as well as your migraines, so you can track back for any patterns discontinue clomiphene citrate .
The validity of some of these suspected triggers has been questioned overdose and children’s motrin . The manufacturer of aspartame has produced data demonstrating that aspartame does not cause headaches doryx prescription . One double-blind study using carob candy as a placebo for chocolate found that women with recurrent migraines were no more likely to develop headaches when given chocolate than when given placebo depakote levels in children . 112 This news was greeted with relief bordering on glee in some circles luvox withdrawl symptoms .
0 * 0
Q usc estradiol study . My wife loves chocolate, but she read that it can trigger headaches panasonic lithium ion cordless wood combo . Now she won’t eat it, even on special occasions side effects with taking prednisone 10mg . I used to buy her great chocolate for Valentine’s Day and her birthday and she really enjoyed it sniffing risperdal .
I never remember her getting a headache right after eating chocolate, but she does occasionally suffer from migraines effects of caffeine on parkinson’s disease . Can you tell me why chocolate is a problem? -
A uses of sertraline . Chocolate has long been blamed for triggering headaches because it is high in tyramine which is better caduet or altace . This substance is thought to release serotonin and make blood vessels contract and expand clozapine and weight gain . But research shows that most headache sufferers may not be susceptible to chocolate atacand hct tablet .
In a carefully designed study, 63 female headache sufferers were given either carob or chocolate bars (both mint flavored to disguise the obvious difference) penicillin alchohol . There was no significant association of headaches with chocolate bar consumption metformin hdl .
Your wife might perform her own experiment to see if she really is sensitive to chocolate doxazosin 6mg . She may be depriving herself needlessly generic versions of zocor .
0 0 0
Some scientists doubt that cheese, chocolate, and nuts are actually migraine triggers was is nortriptyline used for . Even if they are not migraine triggers for most people, some individuals may react to aspartame, chocolate, cheese, or any of a number of other foods hypertension and drugs and accupril .
Have you ever heard of sipping beer to stop a migraine? I went to a doctor in a little town in Louisiana, and he asked if I get an aura carmen allegra md . Before my head starts to hurt, my vision changes and I see little blinky lights levitra in women .
The doctor said / should drink a can of beer (not wine or liquor) as soon as I start to see the lights exelon web mail . Over the last 20 years, this remedy has worked almost every time bactrim prostate specific . / thought some other migraine sufferers would like to know fenofibrate 10 mg .
The 10 predict what foods will trigger a migraine for one person or be helpful for another caffeine and gluten-free diet . Beer is thought to cause headaches for some people warfarin in bulk . But we heard from one woman that if she drank a beer at the very first sign of trouble, the headache never materialized buying generic viagra . She even traveled with an emergency can for medicinal purpose-, The headache diary we mentioned will help you sort out what foods create problems for you depakote er effects on learning .
I have suffered with migraines all my life, but in the Iasi few years they got worse zanaflex snort . My medicine stopped working and I had headaches
every day buy caffeine free dr pepper .
I was desperate, so when someone suggested I see an allergist
did ibm thinkpad x lithium battery . I discovered I am allergic to a lot of foods I ate every day, includ-
ing coffee, wheat, rice, oats, eggs, and tomatoes dr robert bae in lithium .
Now that I have changed my diet, my head is much better seroquel recreational . Some
recurrent migraines warrant seeing an allergist doxycycline stomach pain .
Natural Remedies
The real action in migraine treatment is with the “triptan” prescription drugs that have been developed over the past decade coming off of cymbalta . There is also an interesting advance in a prescription drug to be taken preventatively by those who suffer chronic migraines zoloft and ginseng . But some herbal remedies and dietary supplements have shown promise in preventing migraines, too simvastatin teva side effects .
RIBOFLAVIN
I’ve had migraines for many years atarax 10 ml . I think I’ve taken every migraine drug on the market and even ended up in the emergency room a few times quinapril 0.5 mg .
I was finally sent to a neurologist who told me to take vitamin B complex (B-100) comprar el viagra gen rico .1 can honestly say I have not had a migraine headache in 2 years vytorin lawsuit north carolina . I couldn’t believe after so much time taking drugs that all I needed to do, was take a vitamin ibuprofen and water retention .
Riboflavin, a B vitamin (B), has been reported to help prevent migraine recurrences the mefloquine antiparasitic . One study found that 400 milligrams of riboflavin per day was able to reduce headache frequency markedly, from 4 days a month to 2 days a month synthroid drip .333 This is a very high dose, however lithium battery aa . Another study compared a product that combined 400 milligrams of riboflavin with 300 milligrams of magnesium and 100 milligrams of feverfew extract to a “placebo” of 25 milligrams 01 Tibofiavin lisinopril bactrim harmful interaction .31The researchers found no difference between the placebo and the combination product dexamethasone acoustic trauma . Nevertheless, the scientists weren’t disappointed because both groups had fewer migraines and less overall discomfort than they had had before starting the study naproxen risks .The investigators hypothesized that 25 milligrams of riboflavin might have been enough to help reduce migraines, which would have explained the lack of difference between the placebo and the tested preparation allegra-d dissolve .
Q valsartan hctz . I’ve read that riboflavin, feverfew, and magnesium can help prevent migraines pravachol effects sex drive . But finding all these things and taking multiple products can be difficult seroquel drug information . All three are contained in an OTC product called MigreLief prednisolone weight gain .
I am a 31-year-old female who has suffered from migraines for many years pharmacy glucophage . Two or three migraines a week really interfered with my life clemastine and betamethasone . I would make plans and then at the last minute I would have to cancel due to another migraine soma sujanani .
This was an ongoing problem what is celebrex for depression . Even after numerous doctor visits and many prescription medicines, I never got relief celexa ocd .
When I decided to try MigreLief as a more natural approach, I had fewer headaches within a month cipro side effecs . In a couple of months my migraines disappeared almost completely eye bleeding coumadin .
A metformin avandia . Thank you for bringing this product to our attention prednisone porstate cancer . The manufacturer, Quantum, points out that MigreLief is intended only for headache prevention and not for immediate pain relief the side effects for lexapro . We have not seen a placebo-controlled trial of this combination product, although there is some research to support the use of each of the ingredients for migraine prevention indian cialis .

A-Z Principal Drugs (salbutamol - sodium phosphate)

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

salbutamol A selective beta,- adrenoceptor  It is widely used to relieve bronchospasm in airway obstruction, including bronchial asthma and status astliniaticus, with the advantage of being largely free from cardiac side-effects. Dose: up to 16 ing orally daily; by aerosol inhalation (in which patients should be carefully instructed) 100-200 pg ( 1-2 puffs) Lip to 4 times a day; by s.c. or i.m. injection 500 pg as required; 250 pg by i.v. injection. Salbutamol also, relaxes uterine muscle, and is given in premature labour in doses of 10 pg/inin initially by i.v. infusion, increased to 45 pg/min until contractions have ceased, when oral therapy may be given. Side-effects include tremor, headache, peripheral vasodilation and tachycardia. Care is necessary in ischacinic heart disease, hypertension pertension and hyperthyroidism. (Ventolin). See page 118 and Table 6.
salcatonin A synthetic form of calcitonin, preferred for extended use, as it is less likely to provoke allergic reactions. Dose: in hypercalcaemia, 5-10 units/kg ,fail), 1)), s.c. or Lin. injection according to need; in Paget’s disease 60 units 3 times a week up to 100 units daily. It is also used in post - menopausal osteoporosis and for the bone pain of malignancy. (C.alcynar; Miacalcic).
salicylic acid Etas useful keratolytic and fungicidal properties. Used as ointment (2%) for skin conditions, and as ointments and plasters (up to 40%) for corns and warts.
salmeterol A beta,-adrenoceptor stimulant of the salbutamol type, but with a longer action. It is used for the extended prophylaxis of asthma, bronchitis and other forms of obstructive airway disease, and together with corticosteroid therapy if required. It is not indicated in acute conditions.
Dose: 50 pg twice daily, either from a metered dose aerosol or by a ‘Disklialer’. salmeterol is well tolerated, but headache, tremor and tachycardia may occur with doses above 200 pg daily. (Serovent). See page 118 and,rable 6.
saquinavirV An antiviral agent that inhibits the enzyme HIV-protease, and prevents the development of immature virus particles into the infective virus. Used in HIV
infection together with it nucleoside analogue that has a different action.
Dose: 1.8g (laity. (Invirase). See page 1+1 ;111,1 TAIle 19.
scopolamine See hyoscine.
selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIS) A small group of drugs that inhibit the re-uptake ofserotonin in the central nervous system, and are used in the treatment of depression. They differ from the tricyclic antidepressants in being less likely to cause sedation or cardiac disturbances, or have anticholinergic side-effects. Care remains necessary with machine-related activities, and before and after monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOI) therapy. See page 128 and Table 11.
selegiline A selective enzyme inhibitor that prevents the inactivation of dopamine in the brain. It is used to supplement the action of levodopa in the treatment of parkinsonism, and combined use may give a smoother response, and permit a reduction in the dose of levodopa.
Dose: 5-10111g daily. It may cause nausea and hypotension, and may possibly increase the side-effects of levodopa. (Eldepryl). See page 160 and Table 26.
selenium sulphide Used as a shampoo in the treatment ofdandrull’. Prolonged use may cause alopecia. (Selsun).
senna The leaves and pods of Cassia sp., used as a purgative. Standardized preparations such as Senokot are now preferred.
sermorelinV A synthetic analogue of soniatorelin, the growth hormone releasing factor (GHRH). It is used in the diagnosis of growth hormone deficiency as a single i.v. dose of I pg/kg. (Geref 50).
sertindoleV An antipsychotic agent with a selective action on the limbic system, and used in acute and chronic schizophrenia. Dose: 4 nig once (laity initially, increased alter 2-4 days up to 20 mg daily according to need. Blood pressure should he monitored initially as hypotension may occur.  Contraindicated in patients receiving itraconazole, ketoconazole,  terfanidine, or any drug known to affect the QT interval. (Serdolect). See page 168 and Table 30.

serotonin A substance present in many body cells, which also acts as a neurotransmitter in the central nervous system. A reduction in the brain serotonin levels may be associated with depression and the cranial
vasodilation associated with migraine. (See page 154). Some allergic reactions may also be linked with the action of serotonin on sensitized cells (see cyproheptadine).
I Sod
colic and vomiting, but death from adder bite is very rare. If the reaction to an adder bite is severe, European viper anti-venom, if available, should be given by i.v. infu-
sion within 4 hours of the bite.
soda-lime A mixture of calcium and sodium hydroxides, used in closed-circuit anaesthetic apparatus to remove carbon dioxide.
sertraline A selective serotonin-re-uptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant used both for the treatment oftlepression and the prevention of relapse.
Dose: 50 rig daily initially with food, increased at weekly intervals tip to a maximum of 2(0 mg daily. Not to be given with nionoanlilic oxidase inhibitors (MAOls). Side-effects are tremor and a dry mouth. (usual). See page 128 and Table 11.
silicones Synthetic water-repellent substances present in barrier creams and other skin protective products. Dimethicone is a silicone used as an anti-foaming agent in some antacid preparations.
silver nitrate Used mainly as silver nitrate sticks (caustic points) for cauterizing warts. It has also been used as a 0.5% lotion for suppurating lesions. It was once used prophylactically as eye drops (0.1%0) in the newborn, and is still used for that purpose in the USA.
silver sulphadiazine Sulphadiazine combined with silver. It is used topically as a I% cream for its wide-range antibacterial properties in burns and infected skin conditions, especially when an extended action is required. It is active against Pseudornonas aertiginosta and other Cram- negative organisms. (Flamazine).
simvastatin A selective inhibitor of a specific enzyme (I-IMGCOA reductase) concerned with the synthesis of cholesterol in the liver. It is used in the treatment of primary hypercholesterolaernia in patients not responding to other drugs. Dose: 10-40 mg at night. Liver function tests should be carried out regularly. Side effects include gastrointestinal disturbances. (Zocor). See page Wand Table 20.
snake-bite antivenom A bite from an adder, the only poisonous snake indigenous to the UK, can cause local pain and swelling as well as systemic effects such as
sodium acetrizoate An iodine compound used as a contrast agent in i.v. pyelography.
sodium aurothiomalate A gold compound used in the treatment of active rheumatoid arthritis. It is no value in other forms of the disease, or where bone change has already occurred.
Dose: 10 mg by deep Lin. injection weekly initially, slowly increased to 50 mg weekly. and continued until a remission occurs, or until a total dose of I g has been given.
Blood and urine tests are essential after each injection. After remission, 20-50 mg may be given every 2-1 weeks for many months. Side-effects are common, and include blood disorders, skin reactions, mouth ulcers and oedenia, anti may require withdrawal of the drug. It is contraindicated in renal and hepatic disease, blood dyscrasias and hypertension. (Myocrisin). See auranoran,
page 165 and Table 29.
sodium bicarbonate A soluble antacid, often used in association with less soluble antacids such as magnesium carbonate or trisilicate.
Dose: 1-4 g. In severe metabolic acidosis it is given by slow i.v. injection as an 8.4% solution. For alkalization of the urine, up to 3 g orally 2-hourly with further 10 g
doses daily as required.
sodium calcium edetate A chelating or binding agent used in poisoning by lead and other heavy metals.
Dose: 80 mg/kg daily by i.v. infusion in glucose/saline solution. Nausea and cramp are side-effects, and care is necessary in renal impairment. Medclair).
sodium cellulose phosphate An ion-exchange compound that binds with calcium in the intestines, and so reduces calcium absorption. Used in the oral treatment of hypercalcaemia and renal stones, and as an adjunct to low-calcium diets. Dose: 15 g daily. Diarrhoea is an occasional side-effect. (Calcisorb)•

sodium chloride An important constituent of blood and tissues. It is widely used by i.v. infusion as normal saline solution (0.9%), or as glucose-saline in the treatment of dehydration, shock and other conditions of sodium depletion. It is also useful when given orally as Sodium Chloride with Glucose Oral Powder (BNF) (after solution in water), for children with diarrhoea to offset any loss of salt. Its use as an emetic in the treatment of poisoning is no longer recommended. It is used externally as saline solution when a simple cleansing lotion is required.
sodium citrate An alkaline diuretic similar to potassium citrate and given for similar purposes.
Dose: 1-4 g. For citrating milk, 100 mg to each feed may be used. A 3% solution is used by bladder irrigation for the dissolution of blood clots.
sodium clodronate See clodronate, editronate and pamidronate.
sodium cromoglycate An antiallergic agent with a specific action and used for the prophylactic treatment of asthma by inhalation. It stabilizes mast cells and inhibits the release of histamine and other spasmogens that cause bronchospasm. Dose: by powder inhalation from a `Spinhaler* 20 mg up to 9 times a day; by aerosol inhalation, 10 mg (2 puffs) up to 8 times a day. Dose in the treatment for food allergy associated with local inflammation, 800 mg daily orally. It is also of value as eye drops (2%) and eye ointment (40/4) in allergic conjunctivitis, and as nasal drops or spray (2%) in the prophylaxis of allergic rhinitis. (Intal, Rvilacrom). See page I I O and Table 2.
sodium fluoride The fluoride present in dentifrices used to reduce dental caries. It may also be given orally when more intensive treatment is required.
Dose: 250-5001igdaily.
daily by i.v. infusion. Side-effects include nausea, rash and jaundice. Liver function tests should be carried out during treatment. (Fucidiu).
sodium hypochlorite A weak solution of sodium hypochlorite containing 0.25% of available chlorine is used as eusol, for the cleansing of wounds and ulcers. The
Solution is unstable and should be freshly prepared. Its value has recently been questioned. Stronger, stabilized solutions are used for the general disinfection of surfaces contaminated with blood and other body fluids. Their use reduces the risk of transmission of hepatitis and other viral infections.
sodium ironedetate (sodium feredetate) A soluble iron complex available as a solution containing 27.5 mg of iron per 5 nil. It is used in the oral treatment of iron-deficiency anaemias, and is of value when other iron preparations are not tolerated. Dose: 15-30 nil daily. (Sytron). See page 112 and Table 3.
sodium lactate Has been used as M/6 solution, or as Hartmann’s solution, by i.v. infusion for metabolic acidosis, but sodium bicarbonate is now preferred.
sodium nitrite A cyanide antidote.
Dose: as it 30/b solution by i.v. injection of 10 nil, followed by the slow injection of 25 nil of sodium thiosulphate solution (50%). Early treatment is essential. See kelocyanor.
sodium nitroprusside A short-acting arteriovenous vasodilator used in hypertensive crisis and for controlled hypotension during anaesthesia.
Dose: by i.v. infusion, 0.3-1 pg1kg/juin, the lower doses being used to obtain hy
, poten-
sion during surgery. It is also used in acute heart failure in doses of 10-1 5 pg/niin, increased as required to 2001ighnin.
sodium fusidate An antibiotic used mainly in penicillin- resistant staphylococcal infections, although a secondary anti-staphylococcal antibiotic is often given to increase the response and inhibit drug-resistance. It is useful in osteomyelitis and similar conditions as it penetrates into bone tissues.
Dose: 2 g daily. In severe infections, 1.5 g
sodium perborate White powder soluble in water, with antiseptic and deodorant properties similar to hydrogen peroxide. A 2% solution is used as a mouthwash.
sodium phosphate A solution of sodium phosphate with sodium acid phosphate is sometimes used by enema as a laxative.

A-Z Principal Drugs (pyrazinamide - saccharin)

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

pyrazinamide An antituberculous drug that is active against the intracellular and dividing forms of M. tuberculosis, and is most effective in the early stages of die disease. It penetrates the meninges, and is Of value in tuberculous meningitis. Dose: in combination with other drugs, 2 g 3 times a week. Side-effects include fever, jaundice and hepatotoxicity. Liver function tests should be carried out before and during treatment. (Zinamide). See page 170 and Table 31.
pyridostigmine An anticholinesterase similar to neostigmine. It has a slower and more prolonged action that is useful in some cases of myasthenia graves. Dose: 300–720 mg daily. The side-effect, are similar to those of neostigmine, but may be less severe. (Mestinon).
pyridoxine (vitamin B,) This vitamin plays an essential part in protein metabolism. Apart from its use in deficiency states, which are uncommon, pyridoxine has been used in isoniazid-induced neuropathy. Dose: 2,5-150 rig daily; in some sideroblastic anaemias, up to 400 rig daily.
pyrimethamine Ail antimalarial drug used with dapsone as Maloprint or with sulphadoxine as Fansidar in the prophylaxis of malaria. The use of these mixed products is not without risk, as they may have severe and sometimes fatal side-effects.
quetiapine A new ‘atypical’ antischizophrenic drug of the clozapine type with a high affinity for serotonin (5-HT) and dopamine DI and D2 receptors.
Dose: in schizophrenia, initilal doses of 25 rig twice a day, slowly increased up to 150-750 mg daily. Initial doses may cause hypotension. Care is necessary in cardiovascular disease. Side-effects include drowsiness and dizziness. The routine blood monitoring necessary with dozapine is not required. (Sew,jud). See page 108 and Table 30.
quinagolide A dopamine agonise used in
the treatment of hyperprolactinaemia.
I Rai
Dose: 25 jig at bedtime initially, increased at 3-day intervals to 75-100µg daily. Side-effects include hypotension, and the blood pressure should be monitored after a
change of dose. (Norprolac). See brornocriptine and cabergoline.
tquinalbarbitone sodium A short-acting barbiturate. Used in mild insoninia and anxiety states.
Dose: 50-100mg. (Seconal).
quinapril Ail ACE inhibitor with the actions, use and side-effects of that group of drugs. Dose: in hypertension, 5-10 mg daily initially, slowly increased to 20-40 mg as a single daily dose. (Accupro). See ACE inhibitors, page 148, and Table 21.
quinidine Ail alkaloid of cinchona, similar to quinine, that has been used in the preventive treatment of ventricular arrhydimias, but beta-blocking agents are now preferred.
Dose: (after a test dose of 200 rig) 200-400 mg 3-4 times a day. Side-effects are tinnitus, vertigo and confusion. Treatment should be stopped if response does not occur within 10 days.
quinine The principal alkaloid of cinchona bark. It was once used extensively in the treatment of malignant tertian malaria, and recently it has regained some of its value with the emergence of chloroquineresistant malaria.
Dose: 1.8 g daily for 7 days; in serious infections it is given by i.v. infusion in doses of 10 rig/kg for up to 3 doses, followed by oral therapy. Side-effects include tinnitus, nausea, rash and visual disturbances. See specialist literature.
rattitroxedV A selective enzyme inhibitor used in the palliative treatment of advanced colorectal cancer. It has advantages over fluorouracil, as treatment is less complicated and the incidence of leucopenia, mucositosis and other side-effects is less severe. Dose: 3 mg/ni! by slow i.v. injection, repeated at intervals of 3 weeks if tolerated. Blood counts and liver function tests are necessary. (Tomudex). See page 122 and Table 8.

ramipril An ACE inhibitor with the general properties of such drugs.
Dose: in mild hypertension, L25 ing daily, increased at intervals of 1-2 weeks tip to a maximum of 10 mg, given with food and adequate fluid. Prophylactic dose after myocardial infarction 5-10 ing daily. (Tritace). See page 148 and Table 21.
ranitidine A powerful and selective histamine H, antagonist of the cimetidine type, but with a longer action. It reduces the volume, acidity and pepsin content of gastric secretion, and is of value in peptic ulcer, reflux oesophagitis and similar conditions.
Dose: 300 nig daily for at least 4 weeks, maintenance (loses, 150 mg daily. In severe conditions, 50nig by i.ma or slow i.v. injection repeated at intervals of 6-8 hours. In suspected gastric ulcer, malignancy should be excluded before treatment is commenced. (Zantac). See cimetidine, page [62 and Table 27.
ranitidine bismuth citrateV It has the general action of ranitidine, but it also has a protective effect on the ulcerated area, and inhibits digestive action of pepsin on the gastric mucosa. It is given with amoxycillin and clarithromycin to promotethe elimination of Helicobacter pylori.
Dose: 800 mg daily. (Pylorid). See page 162.
razoxane A cytotoxic agent occasionally used in the treatment of leukaemias. Dose: 150-500 nighril daily for 3-5 clays, under laboratory control. Side electsare nausea and myleosuppression. (Razoxin).
Rif
Dose: by aerosol inhalation; 0.5-1 mg
( 1 -2 puffs), repeated up to 3 times a day. Side-effects include tremor an(] mild tachycardia. (Bronchodil). See page 118 and Table 6.
resorcinol A keratolytic agent used mainly as an ointment in acne, and as a hair lotion for removing dandruff. Myxoedema has been reported following the prolonged use of resorcin preparations.
reteplase A thrombolytic agent used in acute myocardial infarction.
Dose: 10 units by slow i.v. injection within 2 hours of the infarction. A second dose may be given 36 hours later, together with heparin, to reduce the risk of rethrombosis. Side-effects are arrhythmias an(] gastrointestinal bleeding. (Rapilysin). See page 156 and Table 24.
retinol See vitamin A.
riboflavine (vitamin B2) Part of the vitamin B complex, it is concerned with the oxidation of carbohydrates and amino acids. A deficiency causes several characteristic effects, including angular stomatitis and’burning feet’.
Dose: 1-10 mg in deficiency states associated with restricted diets or poor absorption.
rifabutinV A derivative of rifampicin used in the multi-drug treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis.
Dose: 150-450 mg daily. It is also used I,i,)I,Iiyl.iclically.ig,.iiii.%t opportunistic infection with Mycobacterium avium. (Mycobutin). See page 170 and Table 31.
reboxetineV An inhibitor of noradrenaline reuptake used in depression.
Dose: 4 ing twice a day, half-doses for the elderly. Side-effects are those of other antidepressants. Care in renal/hepatic impairment. (Fdronax). See page 128 and Table 11.
remifentanilV An analgesic of the fentanyl type used as an adjunct in doses of
0.5-1 fig/kg/min for the induction of anaesthesia. Its use reduces the amount of general anaesthetic required. (Ultiva).
reproterol A bronchodilator with the actions, uses and side-effects of salbutamol.
rifampicin An antibiotic now considered to be the first-choice drug in the treatment of tuberculosis, and given together with isoniazid and pyrazinamide.
Dose: 600 mg before breakfast. It is also used with dapsone and clofazimine in the initial treatment of severe leprosy. Combined therapy is also used in brucellosis, legionnaire’s disease and severe staphylococcal infections. Side-effects include gastrointestinal disturbances, rash, an influenza-likesyndrorne and hepatic reactions. Jaundice is a contraindication. Patients should be warned that rifampicin gives a red colour to the urine, sputum and tears, and to soft contact lenses. It may decrease the response to oral anticoagulants such as warfarin, and the failure of oral contraceptives has also been reported in patients receiving rifampicin. (Rifadin; Itiniaciane), See page 170 and Table 31.
riluzoleV A new drug used only for motor neurone disease (a myotrophic lateral sclerosis-ALS). ALS is a degenerative disease and may be due to the local accumulation of the neurotransmitter glutamate, with consequent neurone damage. Riluzole slows down the progressive nature of the disease, and improves the response to mechanical ventilation. Dose: 100 mg daily. See specialist liteiawre. Milutek).
rimiterol A bronchodilator similar in actions and uses to salbutamol, but with a shorter duration of effect. It is largely free from any cardiac stimulant activity. Rimiterol is used mainly for the relief of bronchospasm in bronchitis, bronchial asthma and similar conditions.
Dose: by aerosol inhalation, 200-600 pg ( 1-3 puffs) up to a maximum of 8 puffs daily. (Pulmadil). See page 118 and Table 6.
I sac
Lip to 350 pg/min. or 10 mg by i.m. injection and continued until the contractions have ceased; then orally up to 120 mg daily to prevent relapse. Side-effects include tremor, nausea and hyj)otension. (Yutopar).
rocuronlurn A muscle relaxant similar in actions and uses to vercuronium. Dose: 600 pg/kg initially, followed by 300-600 pglkglhrly as required.
(lisincron).
ropiniroleV A potent and selective
dopamine D,-receptor agonist used in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, a condition basically due to a deficiency of dopamine in the brain. It is well absorbed orally, and reaches the central nervous system where it functions as dopamine replacement therapy.
Dose: first week 750µg daily with food; second week 13 ing daily, third week 2.25 mg daily, then 3 ing daily. Ropinirole may be given as monotherapy or together with levodopa. Side-effects are somnolence, hypotension, leg oedema and gastrointestinal disturbances. Caution in severe cardiac, renal and hepatic conditions. (Requip). See page 160 and Table 26.
89
Ringer’s solution An electrolyte replacement solution containing sodium
chloride, potassium chloride and calcium chloride.
risperidone An antischizophrenic agent of the clozapine type, with a selective affinity for serotonin and dopamine receptors. It may relieve the aggressive symptoms of
schizophrenia as well as the negative aspects such as apathy.
Dose: 6-10 mg. daily. Side-effects are headache, dizziness and agitation. Agranulocytosis is uncommon, and the close blood monitoring required with clozapine is not necessary. (Risperdal). See page 168 and Table 30.
ritonavirV An HIV-protease inhibitor used in HIV infections in association with a nucleoside analogue.
Dose: 1.2 g daily with food. (Norvir). See page 144 and Table 19.
ritodrine A beta,-adrenoceptor stimulant with a relaxant action on uterine muscle, used to inhibit premature labour.
Dose: 5opg/niin initially by i.v. infusion (avoiding fluid overload), slowly increased
ropivacaine A local anaesthetic with the actions and uses of lignocaine. (Naropin).
Rose bengal A (lye used as eye drops (M) to stain and detect damaged conjunctival cells, and in the diagnosis of dry eye.
rubella vaccine A suspension of a live, attenuated strain of rubella virus. It is used for active immunization in girls of 10-14 years, and in seronegative women of childbearing age.
Dose: 0.5 nil by s.c. injection. It is contraindicated in pregnancy, and pregnancy within 3 months of vaccination should be avoided. A combined rneasles/mUnipsit-111101,a (MMR) vaccine is now recommended for all children.
saccharin A synthetic sweetening agent widely used as a non-calorific substitute for sugar. Has been used by rapid i.v. injection (2.5 g in 4 ml) for arm-tongue circulation time.

A-Z Principal Drugs (halothane - fosfamide)

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

halothane A potent non-inflammable inhalation anaesthetic. It suppresses mucous and bronchial secretions, and reduces capillary bleeding. It has sonic muscle-relaxant properties, but in major surgery, supplementary treatment with a muscle relaxant is necessary. Halothane may cause some cardiac irregularities, but an occasional serious side-effect is severe hepatotoxicity, particularly after further exposure to the drug within periods of 441 weeks. Such susceptibility cannot yet be detected, so great care is necessary in any cases of liver dysfunction.
(Fluothane).
hamamelis An extract of witch hazel leaves referred to as harnarnelis or witch hazel water is used as a soothing application for bruises and sprains.
Hartmann’s solution An electrolyte-replacement solution containing sodium lactate, sodium chloride, potassium chloride and calcium chloride.
heparin The natural anticoagulant obtained front lung and liver tissue. It is widely used in deep-vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism.
Dose: by i.v. injection 5000 units initially, followed by 1000-2000 units hourly by i.v. infusion, or 15000 units by s.c. injection 12-hourly under laboratory control. Prophylactic dose before surgery 5000 units, then 5000 units every 8-12 hours for 7 days. Overdosage call be controlled by the i.v. injection of prolamine sulphate. Treatment with heparin may be combined with that of oral anticoagulants such as phenindione or warfarin to provide immediate action before the slow-acting oral drugs begin to take effect. Occasional side-effects include hypersensitivity reactions and alopecia. Heparin is a complex polysaccharide, but certain fragments of that large molecule retain sonic anticoagulant activity, and are referred to as low molecular weight heparins. They are used mainly in the prophylaxis of venous thrombo-embolism, as they have a longer
action than standard heparin. They are given by once-daily s.c. injection, and laboratory control of the bleeding time is not necessary. The dose varies to some extent with the product used.
hepatitis A & 8 vaccines Inactivated hepatitis virus antigens for the protection of individuals highly exposed to the infections. Dose: see data sheets. (I iaverix A;
kncigix B; II–B–Vax).
theroin See diamorphine.
hetastarch A soluble modified starch that is used as a 6% solution with 0.9% sodium chloride as a plasma volume expander. Dose: 500-1500 nil daily by i.v. infusion, up to a maximum of 20 mltkg daily. It is excreted by the kidneys, and care must be taken to avoid circulatory overload. Not for use in congestive heart failure or renal insufficiency. Side-effects are vomiting, chills, fever and urticaria. (clol-IAES; Hespan).
hexachlorophene A slow-acting antiseptic used for skin sterilization, and present in sonic medicated soaps.
hexamine (methenamine) A formaldehyde derivative of low toxicity, occasionally used as a urinary antiseptic. Dose: 2 g daily. It is usually given as hexamine hippurate to ensure the necessary acidification ol’the urine. (Iliprex).
histamine A compound present in a bound form in all mammalian tissues; its release is probably the ultimate cause of many allergic conditions.
histamine H,-receptor antagonists See antihistamines. See page 110 and Table 2.
histamine Hz -receptor antagonists Drugs that (litter from conventional antihistamines in having a selective blocking action on receptors ill the gastric cells that secrete acid. They are widely used in the treatment of peptic ulcer and other conditions requiring a reduction in gastric acid secretion. See page 162 and Table 27.
homatropine An atropine derivative with a similar but more rapid mydriatic action (15-30 minutes), but a shorter duration of effect of about 24 hours. Eye drops
(1-2%) sometimes with cocaine.

hyaluronidase A ’spreading’ factor used to increase the absorption of large-volume s.c. injections. The injection of 1500 units of hyaluronidase, either into the injection site or mixed with the injection fluid, will promote the absorption of 500-1000 mL of electrolyte solution by s.c. drip infusion. (Hyalase).
hydralazine A vasodilator that is useful in the supplementary treatment of hypertension.
Dose: 50- 100 nig daily, usually with a IlliaUide diuretic or a beta-blocking agent. Also given in hypertensive crisis by slots, i.v. injection in doses of 5-10 mg; over-rapid injection may cause a marked fall in blood pressure. Side-effects are nausea, tachycardia and fluid retention (less likely with low doses), but a lupus erythematOSLIS- like syndromemay occur with extended high-dose therapy. (Apresoline). See page 148 and “Fable 21.
hydrochlorothiazide A thiazide diuretic that brings about it marked increase in the excretion of salts and water, and is of value in congestive heart failure and other oedematous conditions. It is also of value iii    as it reduces peripheral resistance, and potentiates the action of some other antihypertensive drugs.
Dose: 50-111(1 Ing daily initially in
oedenia; maintenance dose 25-50 mg daily or oil alternate days. III hypertension, 25-30 Ing daily according to need.
I lydrochlorolhiazidc, like other thiazid”, Increases the excretion of potassium as well as sodium, and in extended treatment supplementary treatment with potassium chloride or effervescent potassium tablets may be required. Side-effects include nausea, rash, dizziness and photosensitivity. (I lydroSaluric). See page 148
and ‘I able 21.
acute lyniphoblastic leukaemia and some lymphomas. In common with some other corticosteroids, hydrocortisone inhibits organ-transplant rejection and in high doses it is given to control incipient rejection.
Dose: varies considerably according to need: for replacement therapy, 20-30 mg daily: in shock, 100-300 mg or more by slow i.v. injection, repeated as required. Side-effects are numerous and include hypertension, oedema, mental disturbances, re-activation of peptic ulcer, muscle weakness and diabetes. Cushing’s syndrome may occur with high doses.
I I ydrocortisone, unlike cortisone, is active topically, in(] is used as eye drops 0.3% (usually with an antibiotic), ointment and cream (0.50/o and 11M, often with an antibiotic to control any secondary infection.
hydroflumethiazide A thiazide diuretic N,ith the actions, uses and side-effects of bendrofluazide.
Dose: 25- 100 nig daily in (lie morning; 25-50 Ing daily in hypertension.
ff lydrenox). See page 148.
hydrogen peroxide solution It contains 5-7% of H 02
, equivalent to about 20 volumes oJ oxygen. It has antiseptic and deodorizing properties, and is used mainly for cleaning wounds. It is also used as a mouthwash (diluted 1:7), and as ear drops (1:4 in water or 501% alcohol).
thydromorphone A potent opioid analgesic of the morphine type. Dose: in severe pain 1.3-2.6 Ing 4 t,-hourly. Walladone).
hydrotalcite Aluminium magnesium hydroxide carbonate. An antacid used in dyspepsia and related conditions.
Dose: I g as required.
55
hydrocortisone The principal corticosteroid, also known as cortisol, that is secreted by the adrenal cortex. It plays a major role in the metabolism of glucose, protein and calcium, in maintaining the electrolyte balance, and in reducing inflammatory and allergic responses. It is used in all cases of adrenocortical insufficiency, including Addison’s disease and after adrenalectomy. It is also used in anaphylactic shock, asthma, rheumatoid disease and allergic states. It is valuable in
hydroxocobalamin A derivative of eydnu,obdlaniin, and now the preferred form of vitamin B,, as it has a more prolonged action.
Dose: in pernicious anaemia and other vitamin 13, deficiency states, I Ing initially ian. repeated 5 times at intervals of 2-3 days; maintenance dose 1 mg by I’ll’
by )CC- Lion every 3 months. It is also given
prophylactically after total gastrectonly. (Cobalin-H; NCO-Cytalliell). See
page 112.

hydroxyapatite A natural substance with a mineral composition somewhat similar to that of bone. It is used as a source of calcium and phosphorus in osteoporosis and other deficiency states. Tablets of 830 mg are available. (Ossopan).
hypermotility of the gastrointestinal tract, and may be useful in spasmodic dysmenorrhoea.
Dose: 40-80 mg daily; in acute spasm, .10 mg by injection. (Buscopan).
hydroxychloroquine An antimalarial with the actions, uses and side-effects of chloroquine. It is also useful in rheumatoid arthritis in doses of 200-400mg daily, and in lupus erythematosus, but side-effects are numerous, and treatment requires expert supervision. (Plaquenil). See page 165.
hypromellose A cellulose-derivative that dissolves in water to form a viscid, colloidal solution. Such a solution is used as a base for eye drops to extend the action of a dissolved ophthalmic drug; to lubricate contact lenses; and to act as a lubricant in chronic, sore eye conditions.
5-hydroxytryptamine See serotonin.
hydroxurea (hydrocarbamide) A cytotoxic agent sometimes used in chronic myeloid leukaemia.
Dose: 20- 30 mg/kg as a single dose daily or 80 nig/kg every third day. Side-effects are nausea, skin reactions and myelo- suppression. (Hydrea). See page 122 and Table 8.
hydroxyzine A mild tranquillizer with some sedative and antihistaminic properties. It is given in the short-term treatment of anxiety, and in pruritus and dermatoses complicated by emotional tension. Dose: 50-400 mg daily. It has the side-effects of the antihistamines, and is not recommended where some sedation is undesirable. (Atarax; Ucerax). See page 117 and Table 3.
hyoscine (scopolamine) An alkaloid obtained from plants of the belladonna group. It is a powerful hypnotic and is widely used together with papaveretum for premedication before anaesthesia in doses of 300-600 pg by s.c. or i.m. injection. It has some antiemetic properties, and is useful in travel sickness and vertigo. Dose: 300 mg 30 minutes before starting the iourney, followed by up to 3 doses 6-hourly. Scopoderm is a patch of 500 pg. Thc side-effects of mouth dryness and dizziness are those of the anticholinergic drugs generally. It is contraindicated in glaucoma. It is used occasionally in terminal care for bowel colic and excessive respiratory secretions. Dose: 600 pg-2.4 mg daily by s.c. infusion.
hyoscine butylbromide A derivative of hyoscine that differs in lacking any central action. It is given in spasm and
I
ibuprofen A non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agent (NSAID) widely used in rheumatoid and arthritic conditions. It is also given as an analgesic for mild to moderate pain, but not for acute gout. Dose: 1.8 g daily initially; lly; maintenance duos, 600 lllg-L2 daily after food. A 5% cream is available for local use. The sideeflicts are those of the NSAID& generally. (BrUlen; Feribid). See page 165.
ichthammol A thick, dark brown liquid with a characteristic odour, derived from certain bituminous oils. It is a mild antiseptic and is used mainly in chronic eczema as a 100A, ointment or zinc paste. A solution (10% in glycerin) has been used oil ulcers and inflamed areas.
idarubicin A potent cytotoxic agent similar in actions and uses to doxorubicin. It is given orally and i.v. in acute nonlymphocytic leukaemia, breast cancer, and as second-line therapy in acute lymphatic leukaemia. Dose is based on skin area. (Zavedos). See page 122 and Table 8.
idoxuridine An antiviral agent now virtually superseded by acyclovir and related drugs. Used occasionally in herpes zoster skin infection by local application of a 5% solution. See page 144 and Table 19.

fosfamide A derivative of cyclophosphamide with similar actions and uses. It is effective in lung, ovary, breast and soft-tissue tumours, as well as some malignant lymphomas.

Psyhoterapy and Allergy

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

‘I get ill if I do a long coach journey - six or seven hours say. I usually feel sick by the end of the journey, and have a headache. The funny thing is, if I’m walking along

the street and I happen to see a coach of the kind that I do long trips on, I feel a bit sick then too, just for a short while. It seems crazy, but I get ill just from seeing

the coach.’
What Jake is observing is the powerful effect of the mind on the body, in the reaction known as conditioning. Some people are more susceptible to it than others, but no one is

completely immune.
The Russian scientist Ivan Petrovich Pavlov first demonstrated conditioning in 1889, with his famous dog-and-dinner-bell experiment. Pavlov rang a bell every time he fed the

dog, and eventually the dog would salivate each time it heard the bell, whether dinner was being served or not. Its stomach would also begin to secrete acid, in anticipation of

the meal, simply on hearing the bell.
Modern-day experiments have shown that conditioning works with immune reactions too. For example, rats can be conditioned by repeatedly giving them an immunosuppressive drug and

always adding saccharin to their drinking water on the day the drug is given. Subsequently, just the taste of saccharin in the water is enough to- suppress their immune

responses.
This surprising discovery is partially explained by the finding that there are nerves running to the lymph nodes – key areas where the immune responses are coordinated. In other

words, the immune system and the nervous system, once thought of as completely separate domains, are in conversation with each other. In fact this is a three-way discussion,

because the hormones are also involved. The study of these complex interactions,
which we are only just beginning to understand, is known as psychoneuroimmunology.
Even before Pavlov carried out his classic experiment, Dr John MacKenzie of Baltimore had discovered that an artificial rose, in the vase on his desk, would bring on an attack

of rhinitis and asthma in one of his patients who believed that she was allergic to roses. (In fact such an allergy is unlikely –see box on p. 127. It is usually the strong

scent that triggers symptoms, the allergy being to something else, often grass pollen, which is in the air when roses flower.)
Much more recently, something similar happened – this time unintentionally – when a boy with severe hayfever and pollen asthma was undergoing hypnosis aimed at helping him

relax. Part of the hypnotist’s standard technique was to describe an idyllic scene in an alpine meadow, and ask the subject to imagine being there. For this boy, it worked all

too well – the thought of the grass pollen in the meadow brought on a severe asthma attack. The hypnotist, with great presence of mind, asked him to imagine a helicopter

suddenly appearing in the sky and rescuing him from the meadow – and the asthma attack subsided. How allergies affect the mind
In studying the psychological aspects of allergy, researchers have discovered that some patients frequently have thoughts that catastrophise the situation. In the case of atopic

eczema, these thoughts might go along the lines of ‘this terrible itching will never end’ or ‘none of the treatment really makes much difference’.
Such thoughts may be just below the surface of the conscious mind most of the time, and it is only by developing the ability to notice what is going on internally that the

allergy sufferer can become aware of them.
Researchers have also found that, when negative thoughts such as these arise, eczema sufferers are far more likely to scratch their skin and so make the eczema worse. Thus the

thought becomes a reality – a self-fulfilling prophecy.
The tendency to catastrophise difficult situations is something that most people develop (or acquire from others) at a very young age, and it may take some effort to even become

aware of this mental habit, let alone change it. Yet it is possible to start thinking about illness, and about life in general, in a different way – for example, as a difficult

challenge but one that can usually be overcome.
Allergies are in no sense unique. Any long-term disease that causes intense discomfort, makes life unpredictable or limits your activities, is bound to have profound effects on

the personality. However strong a person you are, it affects your life, and influences you in a very deep way – shaping you as a thinking and feeling individual. This is

especially true if illness begins at an early age, becoming part of your formative interactions with your parents (see box on p. 233) or marking you out as different from other

children.
This shaping can have both positive and negative aspects, and it is important to recognise that there is a choice about which aspect you emphasise. It is never too late to try

to change the emphasis. Counselling or psychotherapy (see p. 225) may help with this, especially if the counter-productive attitudes to the illness are deeply rooted in family

experiences.
The role of the mind in asthma
The diagnosis of intrinsic asthma has long since been abandoned. This diagnosis, which was commonplace in the 1950s and 1960s, technically meant ‘asthma with no external cause’.

But the widespread assumption was that the cause was psychological. As older asthmatics will tell you, this made their lives particularly miserable, because they were held

responsible for their disease. Families were often ashamed of having an asthmatic child.
The injustice of this sweeping assumption is clear today. Modern research shows that an external stimulus which initiated the asthma, such as an allergen, can usually be found.

Among asthmatic children, an allergic cause exists in 80-90% of cases. Even where no specific stimulus can be found, there is still a clear-cut state of inflammation in the

airways. No one with any knowledge of asthma would now claim that it is an entirely psychosomatic disease, nor even that it is predominantly psychosomatic.
Nevertheless, once asthma has begun, the mind may play an important role in bringing on attacks, or making them worse, as many asthmatics know from their own experience. This is

entirely understandable when you think how closely breathing is tied up with our emotional lives – fear, sadness, excitement and anger all alter the usual breathing pattern in

different ways, and any of these reactions may trigger an asthma attack.
The interactions between the mind and the airways are complex in the extreme, and vary from one person to another. Anxiety and tension can make asthma a great deal worse for

some people, while others only suffer an asthma attack when the stress is over. A few people actually have less trouble with their asthma when under stress and, oddly enough,

this is the reaction that is easiest to explain. Stress activates the sympathetic nervous system (see box on p.235), which produces adrenaline, and the adrenaline opens up the

airways.
For stress to make asthma worse, as it frequently does, there must be some other reaction going on which overrides the effect of the adrenaline. Doctors don’t know exactly what

this is, but asthmatics who get worse when stressed could be hyperventilating (see p. 226) just a little – not enough for it to be obvious, but enough to make their airway

muscles contract.
Breathing through the mouth, rather than the nose, can also occur under intense stress, and this is bad for the airways because the air they receive tends to be drier, dustier

and possibly colder, for not having passed through the nose first. This raw air may irritate the sensitive airway linings of an asthmatic, and so make the airway muscles

tighten. Small local nerves, that run directly from the airway linings to the airway muscles, could cause this reaction.
Scientific tests, carried out in a laboratory, back up these casual observations. For example, many people who are allergic to grass pollen will suffer an asthma attack if the

experimenter says they are inhaling grass pollen through a mouthpiece – even though they are actually inhaling fresh air.
It can work the other way as well. Telling the same asthmatics that they are now inhaling a reliever drug will stop the attack, even though they are still breathing the same air

as before. This is the basis of placebo effect, the benefit that tends to occur with any treatment, even a dummy pill, as long as patients believe that the treatment will work.
Note that it is not necessarily the immune system producing all these reactions. There are also direct effects of the mind on the skin, in atopic eczema, on the airway muscles,

in the case of asthma, and on the nose, in rhinitis. Some of these are due to the autonomic nervous system (see box on p. 235) while others are much less well understood.
The findings described above should be reassuring for anyone who has noticed that their allergy or asthma symptoms are sometimes affected by their thoughts and feelings. There

is no need to feel bad about this, and it certainly doesn’t mean that your allergies are ‘all in the mind’. Conditioning, and other psychological responses, are an entirely

natural reaction to a very real illness.
However, if you suspect that psychological reactions are making a big contribution to your symptoms, you could try to address the problem directly. Hypnotherapy (see p. 223) can

be particularly useful in this regard, because those who are most susceptible to conditioning are also very responsive to hypnotic suggestion – which can counteract the

conditioning messages. Hypnotherapy can also help those asthmatics who
become psychologically dependent on their inhalers – something that happens quite often, especially in people with severe asthma. In the words of one asthmatic ‘If I found that

I’d left my Ventolin at home, that would sometimes start me off wheezing straight away. I was so afraid of being without it.’ Of course, it is important to carry your reliever

inhaler with you at all times, but this kind of excessive psychological dependence is distinctly unhealthy. At worst, it can lead you to over-use your reliever inhaler, which

can increase your risk of a life-threatening asthma attack (see pp. 153-4).
Sometimes the psychological effects involved in allergies and asthma are far more complex and deep-rooted than this, not just a matter of simple conditioning. It is not uncommon

for asthma attacks, in particular, to be provoked by family tensions and anxieties, or by suppressed memories from childhood. This can occur even though the asthma also has a

clear-cut physical cause, such as an allergy to house-dust mite. Some people find that their asthma always gets worse when they are in a certain place, with a certain person, or

in a particular situation. These problems are usually helped by psychotherapy (see p. 225).
While hypnotherapy and psychological treatments can sometimes be valuable, it is vital to remember that the mental factors in allergic reactions are always operating in

combination with purely physical responses – such as the triggering of mast cells by allergens (see box on p.12). Using psychological treatments alone is as much of a mistake as

ignoring the mental and emotional dimension of ill-health completely. The two aspects of treatment – physical and psychological – should always go hand in hand. Be very wary of

alternative therapists who overemphasise the psychological aspects (see p. 209).
Under the skin
To see a baby with severe eczema is heart-breaking for any parent – tormented by something it cannot understand, the child often experiences touch, not as a comforting and

pleasurable contact, but as a further irritation. According to some psychologists who have studied eczema in depth, suffering from severely itchy skin in the early years of life

may create long-lasting psychological problems. They believe that the discomfort associated with the skin, and especially with being touched, interferes with normal processes of

relating to the world and developing loving relationships with others. That is why it is so important to get the skin symptoms under control, with the proper use of steroid

creams, skin care, dietary changes if appropriate, and an anti-scratching programme (see p. 47).
Psychological symptoms from sensitivity reactions
‘People thought that because the hospital couldn’t find anything wrong with me, and because I wasn’t terminally ill, there was nothing wrong with me at all. No one could

understand how I was feeling, or even believed me. My friends and family lost patience with me. I overheard one member of my family saying they thought I was just

attention-seeking. This hurt me so much. I hated being ill all the time. I wanted to go out and enjoy myself and do the things I’d always done, but I couldn’t because I felt so

bad.’
Josey, who is now 27, was ill in this way for seven years, and her symptoms were so incapacitating that she had to give up work and abandon any sort of social life. Now, as she

puts it, ‘I have my life back again.’
The cause of her symptoms – dizziness, confusion, panic attacks, depression, shortness of breath, and a conviction that she was dying – turned out to be a sensitivity to

caffeine which was inducing hyperventilation (see p. 226). Giving up tea, coffee
and cola drinks restored her to normality very promptly, and she has not relapsed since, except on one occasion, when she unwittingly took a headache remedy that contained

caffeine.
What is clear from Josey’s story is how much the disbelief of those around her added to her problems. She felt trapped by her symptoms, which she could not overcome, while

everyone around her assumed that the whole problem was in her head, and that she could ’snap out of it’ if she chose to.
The suffering of patients like Josey could easily be avoided if more GPs knew how to recognise hyperventilation. This is one of those conditions that is well described in the

medical literature, but does not always get onto the curriculum in medical schools. As a result, many hyperventilating patients go through a lot of expensive and time-wasting

investigations, and may not get a proper diagnosis even then. This is especially sad when hyperventilation is so easy to diagnose and treat (see p. 228).
While the symptoms of hyperventilation are easy to spot, once you know what to look for, this is certainly not true of all
The autonomic nervous system
The autonomic nervous system is a kind of ‘auto-pilot’ – a set of controls that generally keeps you well adjusted to your external circumstances without you having to think

consciously about the situation at all.
The autonomic nervous system controls all the involuntary muscles – those in the heart, around the digestive system, and around the airways. It also controls the state of the

blood vessels, including those in the skin. The autonomic nervous system does its work by issuing two different sets of signals – one set that gears the body up for action and

one set that calms the body down.
Two completely separate nerve networks, the sympathetic nervous system and the parasympathetic nervous system, issue these different signals. The target organs – the airways,

heart, skin, and so on – all receive input from both networks.
The ‘get active’ signals are issued by the sympathetic nervous system, which comes into play at times of stress, excitement, fear or anger. When you can hear your heart pounding

or feel your pulse race, that is your sympathetic nervous system at work. It also makes your nasal passages and airways open up, because extra oxygen is needed for intense

physical activity, and it tightens the muscles around the blood vessels, which raises your blood pressure.
‘Chill out’ messages are delivered by the parasympathetic nervous system. This network comes on-stream when you know you can afford to relax. It slows down the heart, lowers the

blood pressure, encourages the digestive system to do its work, and makes the airways grow narrower because less air is needed when you are less active.
Adrenaline (epinephrine) is the messenger substance released by the sympathetic nervous system. Its action in tightening the muscles around the blood vessels allows adrenaline

to be employed as a drug, which saves the lives of people affected by anaphylaxis (see p. 150). During anaphylaxis, there is a massive fall in blood pressure produced by

histamine (see box on p. 12), but an injection of adrenaline can reverse this.
Both adrenaline and its derivatives, the beta-2 relievers such as Ventolin (see p. 152), also help in asthma attacks. They do this by making the muscles around the airways

relax.
The messenger substance of the parasympathetic nervous system is acetylcholine. Drugs which oppose its action – the
anti-cholinergics – can also help relieve an asthma attack (see p. 156) by blocking the airway-narrowing action of the parasympathetic.
One of the ways in which acupuncture appears to work is by adjusting the activity of the autonomic nervous system. When
acupuncture is used to deal with the immediate symptoms of an asthma attack, this is probably how it makes the airways open up.
sensitivity reactions. Food sensitivity can occasionally cause some unexpected psychological symptoms, such as bouts of hysterical crying (see p. 80) that no conventional doctor

would ever associate with food.
Inevitably, patients with sensitivity problems such as these will initially be diagnosed as having a psychological illness rather than a physical one. It may be a very long time

before the correct diagnosis is established.
Even if the patient works out the link between eating the food and experiencing the psychological response, the doctor may well remain unconvinced. What complicates matters for

doctors is that quite a few people with genuine psychological problems would prefer to think that these have a non-psychological cause, such as a sensitivity to food. (In the

opinion of most doctors, patients of this kind are far more common than patients with psychological problems that are genuinely caused by food or chemical intolerance.) For such

patients, accepting that their problems have a psychological cause means thinking about what that cause might be – and it is often something deeply distressing which the person

would rather forget.
Unfortunately, for people who get into this situation, the phoney explanation doesn’t actually help at all, though it can provide a temporary distraction. Ignoring unpleasant

hidden memories is not the answer – the problem does not go away, it just festers. Facing up to the real underlying problem is the only way to get rid of the distress (see p.

225).
If you have psychological symptoms of any kind, bear in mind that psychological causes are by far the most likely. Such causes can include difficult life circumstances, damaging

experiences during childhood, loss of close relationships, or extremely traumatic incidents in the more recent past. Where there are longstanding problems, neurological factors

(damage to the nerves or brain) or metabolic factors (something affecting the balance of chemicals in the brain), might also play a part, or sometimes be the sole cause.
For a busy doctor, without much time to spare, it is immensely difficult to distinguish patients who really do have psychological symptoms due to food or chemical intolerance,

from patients with psychological problems that they have mistakenly attributed to an intolerance reaction.
What adds to the difficulty is that, with time, psychological causes can sometimes be grafted onto a straightforward intolerance problem. This occurs because illness of any kind

can produce some psychological problems of its own, especially if the person affected cannot lead a normal life. The psychological effects of the illness invariably get worse if

the person concerned has been treated with disbelief by doctors, family or friends – as
is frequently the case when a person has indefinite long-term symptoms that are due to food or chemical intolerance. Separating the secondary psychological reactions to the

illness (or to the scepticism of others) from the primary psychological symptoms that are genuinely produced by the intolerance reactions is far from easy.
Hyperventilation and chemical intolerance
Hyperventilation (see pp. 226-9) and chemical intolerance (see p. 84) often go hand in hand. A person who is sensitive to airborne items which they cannot avoid inhaling, such

as perfume or petrol fumes, may well feel apprehensive when they catch a whiff of these, and unconsciously alter their breathing in response. They may hyperventilate.
If they do, this can both aggravate the sensitivity symptoms, and increase their anxious feelings – because one key symptom of hyperventilation is anxiety (see p. 227). In this

way the problem begins to feed upon itself, and can spiral out of control.
Hyperventilation, pure and simple, may also masquerade as chemical intolerance. In these cases, a deep underlying anxiety probably exists in the person concerned, and one way in

which this expresses itself is as a fear of synthetic chemicals. The person’s fear triggers hyperventilation, which is the initial cause of symptoms. That is not how the person

interprets those symptoms however – because the person was anticipating a reaction to synthetic chemicals, the symptoms seem to confirm that a reaction has occurred. Again, a

vicious circle has been started which is hard to break.
Another possible scenario is that someone with a few sensitivity reactions – for example, a reaction to perfume and cigarette smoke – starts to feel concerned about other

chemical sub-
‘ and to suspect that these might also cause problems. If an anxious reaction to the presence of these substances develops into hyperventilation, symptoms will ensue from the

hyperventilation. These symptoms will appear to confirm the person’s fears about yet more sensitivity reactions. In this way, people with relatively mild chemical intolerance

can begin to believe that their chemical intolerance reactions are far more extensive and disabling than they actually are.
Where the symptoms of hyperventilation are all tangled up with symptoms due to genuine chemical intolerance, opinions tend to split. Some doctors will interpret all the symptoms

as psychological, while other doctors will attribute them all to the intolerance. Both are over-simplifying the problem, and missing a crucial ingredient – hyperventilation.

Recognising and treating hyperventilation (see p. 228) can help a great deal to alleviate the illness.
The psychologisation of illness
‘From the moment Joanna was born, she was never hungry’ Sandra recalls. ‘It took all day to force an ounce of milk down, and she seemed to have terrible stomach pains. At six

months old, after countless trips to the doctor, she was admitted to hospital. The hospital doctors couldn’t work out what was wrong, and in the end they said that she was just

very independent and that she wouldn’t eat until she could feed herself. I couldn’t believe my ears – what a thing to say about a six-month-old baby!’ But as far as the doctors

were concerned, that was that.
As Joanna got older, the symptoms got worse. She developed severe constipation, opening her bowels only once every four weeks. Because her over-full bowel put so much pressure

on her bladder, she wet herself several times a day.
‘She hated school, because the other children teased her, saying she smelled. And she had such awful stomach pains that she couldn’t bend down to tie her shoelaces. When she was

six she was admitted to hospital for a second time.
‘Again they said there was nothing physically wrong with her and it was all in her head, and this time they decided that it must be because something traumatic had happened at

home. They wanted her to see a psychiatrist. It was terrible. I knew nothing like that had happened to her at home, but it was impossible to convince them.’ There was talk of

Joanna being taken away from her parents, because of suspicions about child abuse.
Two weeks before seeing the psychiatrist, something happened to change Joanna’s life. Sandra saw an item on television about a book on food allergies. She bought the book and,

remembering how fiercely Joanna had rejected milk as a baby, she hazarded a guess that milk was the problem. She immediately took all dairy products out of Joanna’s diet.
The effect was astonishing. ‘Within 12 hours her tummy ache had gone, and after six weeks she began opening her bowels almost every day. She stopped wetting herself, and was so

much happier and healthier.’ In fact, all of Joanna’s symptoms went away. and she has remained well on a milk-free diet.
Psychologisation is most frequently encountered by patients %vith medical problems that are unrecognised by conventional medicine – Joanna is a typical example of such a

patient. Occasionally, however, those with true allergies find themselves in the same situation. Take, for example, someone who has collapsed after being stung by a wasp but

gives a negative skin-test result to wasp venom. In the case of insect-sting allergy, skin-tests are supposed to give very few false negatives – so the doctor may be sceptical

about the patient’s observation of what happened. A PAST test (see p. 92) may be ordered, but sometimes this too gives a false negative.
Doctors are – not unreasonably – more inclined to believe that the patient is an unreliable witness (there was never any insect involved), or that the patient has a

psychological problem that has led to this consultation, than that both these tests gave a false-negative result. A patient in this position may need to be quite persistent to

get proper treatment. The same goes for anyone else with unusual allergic reactions that are initially labelled ‘psychological’ by their doctor. In such cases, good

communication is everything.
Good communication with your doctor
Given the intense pressure under which they work, doctors often react badly to symptoms that don’t fit into a neat diagnostic pigeonhole, or don’t respond to standard treatment.

They simply do not have the time for unravelling complex problems and there is a common tendency to ‘psychologise’ such symptoms automatically. This often does great damage to

the patients concerned, boxing them into a corner from which it is impossible to escape – the more they try to convince the doctor their symptoms are genuine, and request

further tests or treatment, the more the doctor views them as difficult, demanding patients with psychological problems. Unfortunately, it is part of the dogma about

psychosomatic illness that patients affected by it will object vehemently to such a diagnosis. So the more you insist that the symptoms are not psychological, the more this

confirms the diagnosis as far as many doctors are concerned.
The psychologisation of illness becomes a real nightmare where the patient is a child, and parents are accused of actually causing the symptoms in some way (see Joanna’s story,

left). This has happened more than once to children with unusual sensitivity reactions.
Good communication skills may stop you from sliding into this situation with your doctor. Firstly, whatever else you do, stay very very calm. Getting emotional, agitated or

angry always causes doctors to suspect a psychological cause for your symptoms.
Secondly, be very open with the doctor, and don’t conceal anything. Be clear about describing symptoms, and accurate about times, the intensity of the reaction and any other

details. Never, ever exaggerate. If you are given to describing things quite colourfully in everyday life, tone it down as much as possible for your doctor’s benefit.
Thirdly, don’t make your own diagnosis – doctors are taught to believe that patients who diagnose themselves may well be suffering from hypochondria. Present any medical

knowledge you have acquired from books or the Internet as tactfully as possible. Finally, it will probably help a lot to use the appropriate words to describe your illness when

talking with the doctor.

Breathing Exercises as Allergy Treatment

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Breathing Exercises
Breathing is a delicate art, and it is possible to get it wrong, in a variety of ways and for a variety of reasons. A poor breathing pattern can gradually become habitual,

without the person concerned being aware that his or her breathing is at all abnormal.
Allergy and sensitivity reactions sometimes play a part in causing abnormal breathing, and the symptoms produced by a poor breathing pattern may then augment the symptoms of

sensitivity, creating a vicious circle. Correcting an abnormal breathing pattern, by means of breathing exercises and re-training, can produce remarkable improvements in health

for some people.
Breathing too much
Taking in too much air, often called over-breathing or hyperventilation, is the most common breathing disorder. It can produce a variety of rather strange symptoms (see p. 227)

that are sometimes diagnosed correctly, and treated appropriately, but often get overlooked or misdiagnosed.
The primary purpose of breathing is to obtain oxygen from the air and absorb it into the blood. The lungs are a crucial interface here, a trading post for gases that are

exchanged between the bloodstream and the external air. The delicate, moist membranes that cover the inner surface of the lungs are accessed by millions of tiny thread-like

blood vessels known as capillaries. Oxygen from the air seeps into the blood through the thin walls of these capillaries. At the same time, the lungs clean the blood of carbon

dioxide, a waste gas produced by the body’s metabolism. As oxygen seeps into the blood, carbon dioxide seeps out.
That is the school-textbook view of breathing, and it is correct up to a point. But it is over-simplified and misleading if it simply portrays oxygen as totally
good and carbon dioxide as totally bad. In fact, there is a correct level in the blood for both gases, and too little or too much of either can cause problems.
Carbon dioxide plays an important role in the equilibrium of the blood because, when dissolved in any liquid, carbon dioxide makes a weak acid. So the amount of carbon dioxide

present is crucial in deciding the acidity of the blood. Given that the blood reaches every part of the body, it is not surprising that any changes from its normal composition

have far-reaching effects.
Normally, blood is very slightly acidic, and that is what the body is accustomed to. While some body parts can cope with small changes in the acidity of the blood, other parts

respond very badly. The nerve cells are particularly vulnerable to changes in acidity.
Hyperventilation, or over-breathing, has relatively little effect on the level of oxygen in the blood, which is carefully controlled, but it can lower the level of carbon

dioxide in the blood, thus making it less acid. More commonly, hyperventilation just makes the level of carbon dioxide vary a great deal.

When the carbon dioxide levels in the blood yo-yo about all the time, this has some unpleasant effects. In particular, it disrupts the smooth running of the nerve cells, which

is why many of the symptoms of hyperventilation involve the senses, feelings or behaviour.
The symptoms of hyperventilation can include:
•    numbness or pins-and-needles in the hands and feet, occasionally affecting the lips and tongue as well
•    difficulty in swallowing
•    aching muscles, cramps, tremors and twitches
•    sudden loss of strength in the muscles
•    dizziness, confusion, unreal or spaced-outfeelings
•    blurred vision, ringing in the ears
•    headache, migraine
•    breathlessness
•    aching in the chest
•    abnormal heart rhythm
•    sensitivity to bright lights and loud noises.
There may also be some severe psychological symptoms:
•    panic – a brief but intense state of anxiety
•    prolonged anxiety or depression
•    hallucinations, although this is rare
•    mood swings and phobias, most frequently a fear of dying. The irrational conviction that death is imminent can be overwhelming, even in someone who is young and

apparently in good health.
Each of these symptoms can, of course, be caused in several other ways, but when this whole cluster of symptoms – or a large number of them –occurs together in an individual,

that person is very likely to be a hyperventilator.
When there are short self-contained bursts of hyperventilation, the effects are often described as a panic attack. Doctors usually have no trouble recognising this problem, but

– not surprisingly – are often misled by the sustained psychological symptoms of chronic (long-term) hyperventilation. Many people with chronic hyperventilation are diagnosed as

having some kind of mental illness, and they may go for years without getting the right diagnosis.
Hyperventilation and sensitivity reactions The link between sensitivity reactions and hyperventilation seems to be a complex one. Unfortunately, very little research has been

done in this area, so what follows is based on the case-histories of patients, and the collective experience of doctors, not on hard scientific data.
In some cases, a sensitivity reaction may
directly provoke a change in breathing pattern. This
is what appears to happen for some people with
caffeine sensitivity. Cutting out all caffeine-con-
taining drinks (coffee, tea and colas) seems to put a
stop to the hyperventilation symptoms, because the
multiple symptoms promptly disappear (see p. 235).
In other cases, a severe sensitivity problem such
as multiple chemical intolerance results in an anxious
state of mind, and the anxiety leads to hyperventi-
lation. Hyperventilation, pure and simple, may also
masquerade as chemical intolerance (see p. 236).
Wheezy as a mountain breeze
Ionisers — devices that supposedly turn indoor urban air into a fresh mountain breeze — are often promoted as alternative devices that can clear allergens from the air. They do

remove some allergens, but in the case of asthma, research shows that some ionisers can actually make symptoms worse, by generating ozone which irritates the airways. It is

usually the cheaper ionisers that do this. More expensive models are less likely to produce ozone, but they are unlikely to help either. Several scientific trials show that

ionisers have no significant benefits when used by asthmatics.
Hyperventilation and asthma
While hyperventilation can develop in anyone, asthmatics are particularly vulnerable. During an asthma attack, especially a severe one, developing an abnormal breathing pattern

is an entirely understandable reaction. In an attempt to get more air, you may start breathing more rapidly and taking air into the upper chest, using the accessory muscles of

breathing (see p. 230). These muscles should not normally be used when you are at rest — they exist to give you extra breathing capacity when running fast.
As long as the asthma attack lasts, this forced breathing does no harm, because its effects are cancelled out by the narrowing of the airways. But if this over-breathing

persists after the attack has ended, then too much air is going in and out of the lungs, so carbon dioxide levels in the blood begin to fall.
Simply feeling anxious can also trigger off rapid upper-chest breathing. If you get very worried when an asthma attack starts, you may begin hyperventilating just out of

anxiety.
For asthmatics, in addition to the usual symptoms of hyperventilation (see p. 227) there are some subtle effects of hyperventilation that can make asthma worse:
•    The airway muscles (and all other muscles that are not under voluntary control) contract slightly when carbon dioxide levels in the blood fall.
•    Mast cells are quicker to degranulate (see box on p.12) when
there is less carbon dioxide, and this triggers allergic symptoms. Just to complicate matters, one of the symptoms of hyperventilation is breathlessness. Sometimes this is the

most prominent symptom in non-asthmatic hyperventilators, and the doctor overlooks the other symptoms and gives a diagnosis of asthma. In such cases, people are told they have

asthma when they are actually suffering from hyperventilation alone.
Testing for hyperventilation
You can do two simple tests for hyperventilation at home, if you think that it could be playing a part in your symptoms. (If you are asthmatic, only do these tests when you have

no asthma symptoms and your peak-flow reading is good. Make sure your reliever inhaler is nearby, in case of a bad reaction to the test.)
The first test should be done when you have some symptoms that might indicate hyperventilation (see p. 227).
Find a clean paper bag and hold it over your nose and mouth while breathing normally. Any symptoms that are due to hyperventilation should clear up, because, by re-Inhaling the

air that you have just breathed out, you will increase the level of carbon dioxide in your blood.
The second test is done when you don’t have any of the symptoms listed for hyperventilation.
Speed up your breathing, and inflate your upper chest with each breath. Do this for a few minutes. Do any of your usual symptoms appear? If they do, this suggests that they may

be caused by hyperventilation.
If either of these tests indicates hyperventilation, make an appointment to see your doctor. It is important that you should have a proper medical diagnosis, so that you get the

right professional treatment.
Treating hyperventilation
If you hyperventilate, you could be taught a more healthy breathing pattern by a physiotherapist — ask your doctor for a referral. Certain complementary therapists, such as

osteopaths and Feldenkrais practitioners, can also teach good breathing patterns, and so can experienced yoga teachers (see p. 224). A teacher or therapist who works at a

relaxed pace, is not too dogmatic, and helps you to find your own way to healthy breathing, is preferable to one who tries to impose a regimented breathing pattern on you.
On the assumption that most hyperventilators don’t just over-breathe, but also breathe with their upper chest and under-use the diaphragm (see pp. 229-230), all these different

practitioners will take a combined approach — tackling both sides of the problem at once. This represents an important difference from the Buteykc, method (see below).
The Buteyko method
The stated aim of the Buteyko method (also called the Buteyko treatment) is to stop people from hyperventilating. However, Buteykc, practitioners do not work with people who

have the symptoms of hyperventilation, as recognised by conventional medicine (see p. 227). Instead they work with asthmatics — any asthmatics, not just those whose symptoms

suggest that they might be hyperventilators.
The rationale for this is the claim, by the originator of the exercises, Professor Konstantin Buteyko, that asthma is actually caused by hyperventilation. (What is more,

Professor Buteyko cites hyperventilation as the cause of no fewer than 150 different diseases, including allergies, eczema, migraines, insomnia, bronchitis, high blood pressure

and haemorrhoids. However, his treatment is only marketed for asthma.)
The claims made for the success of the Buteyko method in treating asthma are startling. According to one training centre, it can get 97% of asthmatics off most of their drugs

and able to control attacks within a week of starting.
Not surprisingly, this is a bit of an exaggeration. But the real achievements of the Buteykc, method are still quite impressive: an Australian research study showed that during

the course of Buteyko lessons, the overall use of reliever inhalers (e. g. Ventolin) fell substantially and remained relatively low three months later. However, the patients’

average peak flow stayed the same, and 15% of those studied were admitted to hospital with a severe asthma attack during the trial. In the eight months that followed, 30% needed

a course of steroid tablets – indicating a substantial worsening in their condition. In other words, the Buteyko method can give some help to many asthmatics, but the claim that

it can get almost everyone off asthma drugs and free of asthma is just hype.
Professor Buteyko’s claim to have discovered the fundamental cause of asthma is clearly untrue. What he seems to have discovered is that there are many more hyperventilators

among asthmatics than was widely realised, and that they generally show no obvious symptoms of hyperventilation. His other important contribution is to suggest that

mouth-breathing may create a lot more problems for asthmatics than previously recognised.
The Buteyko method has three aspects:
•    unblocking the nose
•    training to breathe through the nose, not the mouth
•    training to take fewer breaths and pause between breaths. Unlike other treatments for hyperventilation (both conventional and alternative), the original Buteyko method

pays no attention to teaching asthmatics to breathe with the diaphragm. However, a few Buteyko practitioners are now beginning to incorporate this aspect of treatment.
If you decide you would like to try the Buteyko method, there are several different options. Classes are the most expensive route, with very high fees being charged. There are

video cassettes you can buy, which are less expensive. Alternatively, there are various books, which are much less costly, and which explain how to do the exercises (see p.

255).
Whichever option you choose, it is vital that you get your doctor’s permission before starting. Ensure that your reliever inhaler is in your pocket while doing the exercises,

because they could provoke an asthma attack. Keep taking your preventer drugs regularly throughout the treatment. If you start to feel much better and want to reduce your dose

of preventer, you must talk to your doctor first.
Don’t follow the Buteyko method blindly, because some of the advice given is dangerous. For example, some Buteyko publications advise you to refuse oxygen if you are taken to

hospital with a severe asthma attack. They claim that oxygen levels in the blood are not reduced during a severe asthma attack, but this is just not true. Measurements clearly

show that the level of oxygen
gets very low, and this is frequently the cause of death.
Another very peculiar Buteyko idea is that you should not try to shift mucus from your airways because mucus ‘protects you’ against losing too much carbon dioxide. This too is

dangerous advice. Accumulated mucus narrows the airways, adding to your asthma symptoms, and it can even block a small airway completely. The part of the lung served by that

airway then collapses – a serious complication that no asthmatic would want.
Using the right muscles
Hyperventilation is often linked with an abnormal way of breathing, in which the wrong muscles are used. This is one common pattern that conventional doctors recognise for

hyperventilators:
•    The main muscle of breathing – the diaphragm (see below) is not used fully
•    The muscles of the upper chest become involved in breathing, even at rest, when they should not be needed
•    There are lots of rapid, shallow breaths
•    The breathing is quite irregular, with deep, sighing breaths from time to time, or frequent yawning.
Even in those who do not hyperventilate, breathing with the upper chest, and/or neglecting the diaphragm, can become a problem. This pattern of breathing is sometimes linked to

anxiety and emotional problems (see p. 230).
To understand what goes wrong, you need first to know about the healthy way to breathe.
The rib-cage and the diaphragm are the work-horses of breathing. You can feel your rib-cage through your skin, and feel its movements, but the diaphragm is far more

inaccessible. It lies below the lungs, but above the stomach and intestines.
In its contracted state, the diaphragm becomes a thick slab of muscle, with a slight curve, like an inverted saucer. When it relaxes, it becomes far more curvaceous, changing to

a shape like an inverted bell. In this shape, there is less space for the lungs above the diaphragm.
If you are breathing correctly, the diaphragm contracts when you breathe in and relaxes when you breathe out. The contraction lowers the dome of the diaphragm, pulling the base

of the lungs downwards and so making them expand.
Breathing out requires no muscular force whatever, as long
as you are just sitting or walking about (and therefore not breath-
ing hard). The lungs are naturally elastic, like balloons, so they
automatically contract and force out the air, once the diaphragm
relaxes into its bell-like shape and stops pulling them downwards.
While you cannot feel the diaphragm itself, you can feel the
effect of its in-breath contraction. As it contracts, the diaphragm
pushes down on the stomach and intestines, so that your abdomen bulges out a little with each breath. Western women, conditioned to admire an unnatural flat-bellied body shape

(unnatural for a woman, that is), often breathe badly because they are trying to ‘hold the tummy in’. This steely tightening of the muscles across the front of the abdomen

opposes the contraction of the diaphragm, and prevents a natural and relaxed in-breath.
The diaphragm should do virtually all the work of breathing in, when you are not exerting yourself much. The upper part of the rib-cage should hardly expand at all and the

muscles that run between the ribs, the intercostal muscles, should not be working.
When you become more active, and therefore need more oxygen, the upper chest automatically starts to expand with each in-breath. At this point the intercostal muscles become

involved, along with a whole team of other muscles in the chest region —these are known as the accessory muscles of breathing.
The effects of an asthma attack
In the grip of a severe asthma attack, you may well start using the accessory muscles of breathing to try to take in more air. If you have frequent attacks, or if this way of

breathing gets to be a habit and goes on between attacks, then the chest may be distorted by the constant use of the accessory muscles, plus the over-inflation of the lungs.

Severe asthmatics often have high shoulders and a `barrel-chested’ look as a result of this. Hyperventilation may also start in this way.
Observing how you breathe
To discover whether you are breathing with your diaphragm or your upper chest, lie on your back with your left hand on your belly, and your right hand on your upper chest. Just

lie still for a few minutes, let your arms relax, then start to pay attention to your hands. When you breathe in, which hand rises? It should be the left hand, with little or no

movement in the right.
Alternatively, bend over and hold the back of a chair with your hands. Your back, head and arms should form a straight horizontal line, at right angles to your legs. Just stay

quietly in this position for a while. It is very difficult to breathe with the upper chest in this pose, whereas breathing with the diaphragm is easy. If you feel fine in this

position, then you are probably breathing well normally.
Correcting upper-chest breathing
Learning to breathe with the diaphragm is often an important part of correcting hyperventilation (see p. 228). It should also be taught to anyone who has the kind of chest

deformities that develop in severe asthma (see above).
Diaphragmatic breathing, or abdominal breathing as it is sometimes called, should help make you feel more relaxed
because the in-breath can disperse tensions in your abdomen. This is where many people ‘hold on to’ their fears, with chronically tense abdominal muscles. When you start

breathing into this area of tension, it is important to take things gently and not force the breath downwards. Be aware of any resistance to the in-breath in the abdomen, and of

any emotional reactions that occur when you challenge this resistance.
Sometimes breathing in this way for the first time can bring up emotional difficulties that may need careful handling. That is why it may be better to learn abdominal breathing

from someone who has time to deal with such issues, and with whom you feel very comfortable and relaxed — for example, a yoga teacher or an alternative therapist who you like

and trust. Physiotherapists tend to take a very brisk and practical approach to breathing, which may not be entirely appropriate or helpful when habitual ways of breathing are

tied up with emotional problems.
When learning to breathe with the diaphragm, be careful not to get carried away and become a ‘belly breather’, whose every in-breath sends the abdomen bulging out like a

mainsail. The abdominal muscles should oppose the downward movement of the diaphragm to some extent, without being too tense.
Clearing the nose
Breathing through the nose, rather than the mouth, is beneficial for asthmatics, because it cleans and warms the air. It can also help those with chronic sinusitis because it

oxygenates the air in the sinuses, which discourages some of the more troublesome microbes responsible for sinus infections.
This technique for clearing a blocked nose, part of a set of breathing exercises for opera singers, is based on a time-honoured yoga exercise called alternate nostril breathing:
•    Sit with your mouth closed.
•    Press your right nostril against your nose to close it, using the thumb of your right hand.
•    Breathe out through your left nostril.
•    Press your left nostril against your nose with the index finger of your right hand, to close it. (The hand makes only a very small movement from side to side.)
•    Breathe in through your right nostril.
•    Repeat the sequence.
Once you have got the hang of this, do ten fairly rapid breaths, with no pause between out-breath and in-breath. Pause and rest.
Repeat using your left hand, and reversing the flow of the breath: out through the right nostril and in through the left. Again, do ten breaths and then rest.
Alternatively, try the following exercise, which is recommend by Buteyko practitioners for unblocking the nose. This technique has not been tested scientifically, but the

reports of asthmatics who have used it suggest that it often works wonders, even with children who could never breathe through their noses previously:
•    Have your reliever inhaler to hand, just in case the exercise brings on an asthma attack.
•    Breathe as you do normally, and at the end of a normal out-breath, close your mouth and hold your nose
•    Stay like this, without inhaling, for as long as you can without discomfort. Walk around the room while you are doing this or, if you are young and fit, do something

more strenuous – either walk upstairs or squat-then-stand several times.
•    When you need to breathe in, keep your mouth shut but release your nose
•    Breathe in slowly through the nose
•    Repeat the exercise if your nose becomes blocked again.
Special exercises for asthma
In addition to tackling the problem of hyperventilation, if one exists, asthmatics can use other breathing exercises to tackle specific aspects of their asthma.
Clearing mucus from the lungs A physiotherapist can teach methods of clearing mucus from the airways which are suitable for asthmatics. Ask your doctor for a referral. You could

also try the following exercises:
Huffing Take an in-breath, then tighten your abdominal muscles very sharply, to push the air out. Imagine there is a candle in front of you, and you are trying to extinguish it,

but using your belly muscles only. Your out-breath should make a short soft ‘huff’ sound – if it is more of a loud ‘w000sh’, you are contracting the muscles in your chest as

well as those in the belly. Try again, and focus your attention on your belly as you make the out-breath.
The in-breath should be effortless with this exercise – it just bounces back in. Do as many huffs as you can without feeling breathless. Rest and repeat. The aim is to build up

stamina until you can do 30 or more huffs in succession.
Pursed-lips breathing Take a fairly deep in-breath, then purse your lips together. As with huffing, your belly muscles have to do all the work of the out-breath, but in this

exercise they are working against the muscles of the lips. The aim is to divide the out-breath into as many fragments as possible – to push the air out through the lips in a

succession of tiny, forceful blasts.
One objective of these exercises is to encourage mucus to start moving up to the top of the airways. From there, it can be cleared with a little throat-clearing cough. Note that

the mucus will probably take a while to reach the throat – this may happen some time after you do the exercise. For maximum effect, repeat these exercises several times each

day.
Coping with asthma attacks
The crucial thing during an asthma attack is to focus on your out-breath, not your in-breath. Of course this goes against the grain, because you feel so desperate for air, but

remember that the central problem is stale air from your last in-breath, now trapped in your lungs by the narrow airways. If you can focus on exhaling this used air, you will

have more space for fresh air to come in with the next in-breath.
At times when you are not suffering from an asthma attack, it is worth doing some exercises that improve the strength of your out-breath. The key problem during an asthma attack

is that the natural elasticity of the lungs, which should power the out-breath, is not equal to the challenge of pushing out all that air through narrowed airways in a short

space of time. In this situation, contracting your abdominal muscles so that they push upwards and assist in emptying the lungs is helpful.
The two exercises described above for clearing mucus –huffing and pursed-lips breathing – also strengthen those abdominal muscles which can assist you with your out-breath

during asthma attacks.
Strengthening exercises
Several different exercises or pursuits that strengthen the breathing muscles seem to produce an improvement in asthma. The reasons for this are not understood.
Asthmatics who take up a wind instrument, such as the flute, often report that their asthma improves considerably. The same effect has regularly occurred with asthmatics who

undertake classical training in singing. One set of exercises, taught to aspiring opera singers and designed specifically to strengthen the diaphragm, has been scientifically

tested and shown to improve asthma and reduce the need for drugs. These exercises can be learned at home (see p. 255). There are also some mechanical devices which can

strengthen the breathing muscles (see p. 255).

Drugs for Asthma

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Drugs for Asthma
The drug treatment of asthma is far more complex than for any other allergic disease. Drugs prescribed for asthma fall into two basic categories: those that open up the airways by relaxing the airway muscles, called relievers, and those that treat the inflammation in the lining of the airways, called preventers. The former offer a ‘quick fix’ - like taking an aspirin when you have a headache. Just as the actual cause of the headache is not treated by an aspirin, so the actual cause of the asthma attack is not addressed by relievers. Preventers, on the other hand, tackle the basic problem - the inflammation that triggers the contraction of the airway muscles (see p. 36).
In the past ten years, there has been a quiet revolution in asthma treatment, with far more people being given preventer inhalers, usually low-dose steroids. The aim is to get the airways in better condition, with the inflammation thoroughly damped down, so that the airway muscles don’t go into spasm. The ultimate objective is to make people far less reliant on reliever inhalers, because the potential hazards of over-using them are now realised.
The details of modern asthma management, and the different approaches used, are described on p. 160, following the discussion of the main types of drug used for asthma treatment.
Beta-2 relievers (beta-agonists)
Our airways open up when we produce adrenaline. This is the body’s natural response to feeling angry or frightened. The adrenaline widens the airways so that we can run faster or fight more vigorously.
Adrenaline (epinephrine), given as a drug, was among the earliest treatments for asthma. However, it also stimulates the heart to beat faster and raises
the blood pressure. While it is useful for emergency treatment (see p. 155) the side effects make it too hazardous for routine use.
The beta-2 relievers work by mimicking adrenaline – they bind to the same receptors in the airways, the beta-2 receptors. Binding to these receptors stimulates the airway muscles to relax, so that the airways open up.
In other respects, the beta-2 relievers are not like adrenaline. Clever chemical manipulation has made them sufficiently different from adrenaline to have little effect on the heart and other organs, when taken at normal doses.
Beta-2 relievers are best taken by inhalation. Although tablets and syrup are available these are far more likely to bring on side effects, because the dose needed is so much bigger.
Inhaled beta-2 relievers target the drug directly on the airways, so the dose can be smaller. They also have the great advantage of taking effect soon after being inhaled, and giving full relief from airway narrowing within 10-15 minutes.
There are two different kinds of beta-2 relievers:
•    the traditional short-acting beta-2 relievers whose effects last for 3-6 hours (usually about four). The modern consensus is that these should be used only when needed, not taken routinely.
•    the newer long-acting beta-2 relievers, which last up to 12 hours. These drugs are prescribed for more severe forms of asthma (see p. 154), and are generally used routinely, twice a day.
A key question for asthma sufferers is: How often can short-acting beta-2 relievers be used? Ideas about this have changed considerably over the last 20 years, and no doctor would now want to have patients using a Ventolin inhaler five, six or more times a day - something that was quite common in the past. This level of need for beta-2 relievers indicates that the asthma is poorly controlled and requires treatment with a preventer, to quell the inflammation in the airways.
Detailed policy on beta-2 relievers still varies from one part of the world to another. British guidelines state that anyone who needs to use a short-acting beta-2 reliever more than once a day, or who suffers from nocturnal asthma, should be given a preventer as well. The international guideline is more stringent: if a short-acting beta-2 reliever is needed more than three times a week, a preventer should also be prescribed.
How safe are these drugs in the long term? The cause of the big re-think on beta-2 relievers was an epidemic of asthma-related deaths in New Zealand between 1976 and 1988. The death rate from severe asthma attacks was 2-4 times its previous level for a while, and over a thousand New Zealanders died in the epidemic.
There has been a huge controversy over what exactly caused these deaths. Most researchers now agree that the main cause was a new brand of inhaler that delivered a double dose of the drug fenoterol, a short-acting beta-2 reliever with a very powerful effect on the airways and quite high levels of side effects involving the heart. The same brand of inhaler may have been linked to increased death rates in Canada and Germany.
Research suggests that the problem was greatest in New Zealand because sales of the new inhaler were highest there, and because many patients got their inhalers through repeat prescriptions. As a result, people whose asthma was deteriorating badly were not seen by a doctor and were using large amounts of beta-2 reliever, rather than taking preventer drugs. This is now believed to be a major cause of asthma deaths. There are three separate factors involved:
•    The beta-2 reliever covers up the effects of the severe inflammation of the airways. People feel reasonably well, because the reliever is opening up their airways, and don’t realise just how bad their asthma really is. The untreated inflammation in the airways can eventually lead to a very serious, and potentially fatal, asthma attack.
•    The short-acting beta-2 reliever, used regularly, makes the airways more sensitive to exercise, and to allergens such as dust mite or pollen. This means that an asthmatic who is already allergic to these allergens reacts to them at much lower levels in the air.
•    The airways become less and less responsive to the beta-2 reliever itself, so that when a serious attack occurs, requiring hospital treatment, huge doses of beta-2 reliever are needed to open up the airways. These massive doses carry a risk of serious side effects involving the heart.
The details of the New Zealand epidemic still evoke controversy. Was fenoterol itself, which is stronger than other beta-2 relievers, the cause of the deaths? Or was it just that the inhaler delivered a double dose - would any short-acting beta-2 reliever be dangerous at twice the normal dose? Or was it over-use of all beta-2 relievers and lack of preventer drugs?
Some common brand names
Common brand names include:
short-acting beta-2 relievers in inhalers - Aerolin, Airomir, Bricanyl, Ventolin short-acting beta-2 relievers in tablets - Bambec, Bricanyl, Volmax short-acting beta-2 relievers in syrup - Monovent, Ventolin
long-acting beta-2 relievers in inhalers - Bambec, Foradil, Oxis, Serevent
Until this is resolved, safety-conscious asthmatics may want to assume that any of these possibilities could be correct. An ultra-cautious approach would include:
•    Avoiding fenoterol (it is no longer available in Britain, except in the Duovent inhaler, combined with an anti -choli nerg ic drug)
•    Not using double-dose inhalers of any beta-2 reliever (i.e. inhalers that deliver 200mcg/ micrograms per puff)
•    Not routinely taking two puffs of a single-dose inhaler (check with your doctor if you have been told to take two puffs)
•    Using any short-acting beta-2 reliever only I as needed’ – which should be once a day or less according to British guidelines. Note that, with this level of use, there is absolutely no risk from these drugs: it is only regular over-use that is damaging and dangerous.
•    Using a peak-flow meter and ensuring that you are assessed regularly by your doctor
•    Always taking your preventer medication as prescribed.
Since about 1990, the death rate from asthma has been falling, particularly in countries with a policy of reducing use of beta-2 relievers, and increasing inhaled steroids. The death rate in New Zealand is now the lowest it has been for 50 years, and at the same level as in other Western countries.
Unnecessary alarm
While investigating the causes of the New Zealand epidemic, medical researchers discovered that patients inhaling a short-acting beta-2 reliever four times a day had more irritable airways after just two weeks. Their airways were also less responsive to the drug, even after this brief period of use.
Some researchers began to ask if the asthma epidemic itself – the increasing number of cases of asthma – could actually be due to these drugs. Maybe children with mild wheezing, which might have cleared up if left untreated (and which would have gone untreated in the past) were becoming full-blown asthmatics because they were now using beta-2 inhalers?
Many doctors became very concerned about these questions, and a leading medical journal
published an article with the provocative title: ‘Worldwide worsening wheezing – is the cure the cause?’ That was in 1992. Since then, much more research has been done, and it is clear that this particular fear about beta-2 relievers was unfounded.
Unfortunately, there are a few books and other publications around that are spreading unnecessary alarm about these drugs by reporting the debate as it was in 1992. They have taken up that question ‘Is the cure the cause?’, assumed that the answer is ‘yes’, and ignored all the subsequent research, which shows the opposite.
Beta-2 relievers in severe asthma
A few patients with severe asthma remain breathless and wheezy, even though they are inhaling moderate doses of a steroid preventer every day. Increasing the dose of inhaled steroids does not make a huge difference to their symptoms, and it substantially raises the risk of steroid side effects.
Taking a long-acting beta-2 reliever often works wonders for such patients. These relatively new drugs relax the airway muscles, and go on working for 12 hours or more.
There has obviously been concern about long-acting beta-2 relievers having the same sort of insidious side effects as their short-acting colleagues (see p. 153), and so increasing the likelihood of deaths from asthma. However, studies of people taking these drugs suggest that the risks are minimal. Certainly, long-acting drugs taken twice a day are very much safer than short-acting drugs taken four times a day.
Other studies show that the chemical differences of the long-acting drugs, as well as prolonging their effects, also give them a more complex set of actions in the body. For example, they improve the effect of steroids in calming inflammation, and may even have some small anti-inflammatory effect of their own.
Doctors believe that, for patients with troublesome asthma, the benefits of long-acting beta-2 relievers greatly outweigh the risks. But they should only be used in combination with inhaled steroids. Various other options, such as allergen avoidance and the new anti - leukotriene drugs (see p. 159), should probably be investigated as well.
If you are taking long-acting beta-2 relievers, do use them regularly, once every 12 hours – the good effect gradually builds up with consistent use.
Generally speaking, you should not take additional doses in between. These are not intended for use if you have a sudden asthma attack – your doctor will prescribe a short-acting beta-2 reliever for this. This limitation on the use of long-acting beta-2 relievers is certainly appropriate for salmeterol (which was the first of the long-acting beta-2 relievers to be developed) because it is very slow to take effect on the airways. However, one of the newer long-acting beta-2 relievers, called formoterol, begins to work just as quickly as a short-acting beta-2 reliever. Formoterol could, in theory, be used on an ‘as-needed’ basis to combat asthma attacks. You may want to discuss this possibility with your doctor.
Finally, don’t stop taking your preventer drug (e.g. inhaled steroid or cromoglycate), even if you feel a lot better. Long-acting beta-2 relievers are not a substitute for preventers.
Some patients with very severe asthma need to take regular doses of short-acting beta-2 relievers as well as long-acting beta-2 relievers. You should obviously follow the advice of your asthma specialist closely if you are on this kind of drug regime, and not change anything without approval. However, it might be worth discussing other options, such as anti -leukotriene drugs. In addition, do all you can to combat your asthma in other ways – by reducing allergen exposure, avoiding asthma triggers (see p. 39), and employing various other self-help measures (see p. 41).
Immediate side effects of beta-2 relievers
Minor immediate side effects of these drugs include:
•    headache
•    nervousness, trembling, restlessness, anxiety; children may become more excitable, and some are badly behaved or even aggressive.
•    flushing
•    dry mouth
•    muscle cramps.
These side effects – all of which are due to the resemblance of beta-2 relievers to adrenaline – usually wear off relatively quickly. Some long-acting beta-2 relievers may cause nausea and vomiting.
A pounding heart is usually a relatively minor side effect, but it can be more serious, and should be reported to your doctor.
A few asthmatics find that their airways tighten up when these drugs are inhaled, rather than opening. This is called paradoxical bronchoconstriction. If this happens, stop using the inhaler and see your doctor as soon as you can.
Even more rarely, asthmatics can develop allergic reactions to the drugs, or suffer hallucinations or seizures. Obviously you should stop using the inhaler immediately if you experience side effects of this kind, and should see your doctor.
There can be an interaction between beta-2 relievers and other drugs or medical conditions. Should you need a diuretic, tell the doctor or pharmacist that you are also taking a beta-2 reliever, and ask which diuretics are safe. If you have high blood pressure, a heart problem, or a thyroid condition, make sure the doctor remembers this when prescribing beta-2 relievers.
Adrenaline inhalers
Adrenaline inhalers are for use in emergencies. Technically, they are not available in Britain, but they can be imported under special licence, and your doctor may be persuaded to obtain one for you if he or she thinks it might be useful. They are given to people who have asthma and have sometimes had attacks of anaphylaxis (see p. 58), for example in reaction to food, latex or an insect sting. The inhaler provides prompt emergency treatment for the kind of severe asthma attack that you may experience during anaphylaxis.
You should probably be carrying an adrenaline auto-injector as well, as you may need to use both (see p. 98). Those who usually have fairly mild reactions to their allergen can use the inhaler first, to treat symptoms in the mouth, throat and airways. If other symptoms develop, such as faintness or widespread nettle rash,
Asthma alert
If you ever find that your short-acting beta-2 reliever has no effect within ten minutes, or is needed more than once every four hours, this indicates a serious asthma attack and you need urgent medical help (see p. 100).
During a severe asthma attack, while getting to hospital or waiting for a doctor to arrive, up to 30 puffs of a short-acting beta-2 reliever should be taken as an emergency treatment, to get the airways open. There is a risk of death if you don’t use the reliever fully in this situation. (This emergency dose is safe for almost everyone, but there may be risks if you have a heart condition – get detailed advice from your doctor in advance.)
then the adrenaline injector can be used. Those with a history of more severe reactions should start with the adrenaline injector and then use the inhaler if there are still symptoms in the mouth or airways.
Don’t exceed the maximum number of puffs stated on the canister, as the propellant can cause problems. If you have a heart condition, your doctor will advise you about using this kind of treatment safely - adrenaline can affect the heart.
Ephedrine
Ephedrine and orciprenaline (brand name Alupent) belong to the previous generation of reliever drugs. They are chemically very similar to adrenaline and therefore cause a lot of side effects, especially involving the heart.
These drugs are no longer recommended, and will soon be phased out completely. Some older asthmatics may still be using them, just because they have been on them for years and no one has reviewed their treatment.
If you are taking such drugs, ask your doctor about switching to a newer form of reliever - it will be more effective in treating your asthma, as well as having fewer side effects.
Anti -cho linerg ics
These drugs, also known as anti-muscarinics, are relievers. However, they work in a completely different way from the beta-2 relievers. They block the action of the parasympathetic nervous system, a set of nerves that are the biological equivalent of auto-pilot - working without the intervention of conscious thought. The parasympathetic nervous system has many effects on the body, including keeping the airway muscles nicely toned (see box on p. 235). By blocking the parasympathetic, anticholinergics help the airway muscles to relax.
Anti-cholinergics are taken by inhaler, and require 30-90 minutes to achieve their full effects. They should continue working for 3-6 hours.
Some common brand names
Common brand names of anti-cholinergics include: inhalers – Atrovent, Oxivent
nasal spray - Rinatec
For most asthmatics, especially those with a strong allergic component to their asthma, anti-cholinergics are generally less effective than beta-2 relievers. But they are useful to children under one year, who may not respond to beta-2 relievers. They also have a role where asthma is combined with chronic bronchitis -here the anti -choli nerg ics can sometimes be more effective than beta-2 relievers - and they are particularly useful for asthma with a lot of mucus, because blocking the parasympathetic tends to reduce mucus production. For severe asthmatics, anticholinergics may be combined with beta-2 relievers.
Anti -choli nerg ics should be taken only when needed, not regularly several times a day. If used regularly, they can make the airways more sensitive, just as short-acting beta-2 relievers can (see p. 153).
Side effects
Minor side effects of anti-cholinergics may include a dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, and irritation of the mouth and throat. A few people suffer nausea or difficulty in passing urine.
Serious side effects are rare. Any increase in the stickiness of the sputum coughed up may be a cause for concern, especially in children. If there is an increase in wheezing or coughing, stop taking the drug and see your doctor.
If you already have glaucoma or prostate problems you should be monitored carefully by your doctor, as these conditions can get worse with anti -choli nerg ic drugs.
When anti -choli nerg ics are used in a nebuliser, it is vital that the mask fits well (see p. 163).
Anti-cholinergics for the nose
Another use for anti-cholinergics is in nasal sprays, for the treatment of vasomotor rhinitis, a non-allergic condition that is frequently mistaken for allergic rhinitis (see p. 29). In this disorder, the constant flow of mucus is caused by a malfunction of the parasympathetic nervous system, which is why anti-cholinergics work well.