Aerius

11 Topics Found
Aerius Desloratadine

Desloratadine (trade names Clarinex and Aerius) is a tricyclic H1 antagonist that is used to treat allergies. It is an active metabolite of loratadine. It was patented in 1984 and came into medical use in 2001.[3] Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Interactions 4 Pharmacology 4.1 Pharmacodynamics 4.2 Pharmacokinetics 4.3 Pharmacogenomics 5 Society and culture 5.1 Economics 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Medical uses Desloratadine is used to treat ...

Claramax Desloratadine

Desloratadine (trade names Clarinex and Aerius) is a tricyclic H1 antagonist that is used to treat allergies. It is an active metabolite of loratadine. It was patented in 1984 and came into medical use in 2001.[3] Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Interactions 4 Pharmacology 4.1 Pharmacodynamics 4.2 Pharmacokinetics 4.3 Pharmacogenomics 5 Society and culture 5.1 Economics 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Medical uses Desloratadine is used to treat ...

Clarinex Desloratadine

Desloratadine (trade names Clarinex and Aerius) is a tricyclic H1 antagonist that is used to treat allergies. It is an active metabolite of loratadine. It was patented in 1984 and came into medical use in 2001.[3] Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Interactions 4 Pharmacology 4.1 Pharmacodynamics 4.2 Pharmacokinetics 4.3 Pharmacogenomics 5 Society and culture 5.1 Economics 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Medical uses Desloratadine is used to treat ...

Neoclarityn Desloratadine

Desloratadine (trade names Clarinex and Aerius) is a tricyclic H1 antagonist that is used to treat allergies. It is an active metabolite of loratadine. It was patented in 1984 and came into medical use in 2001.[3] Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Interactions 4 Pharmacology 4.1 Pharmacodynamics 4.2 Pharmacokinetics 4.3 Pharmacogenomics 5 Society and culture 5.1 Economics 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Medical uses Desloratadine is used to treat ...

Desloratadine Drug Index

Desloratadine (trade names Clarinex and Aerius) is a tricyclic H1 antagonist that is used to treat allergies. It is an active metabolite of loratadine. It was patented in 1984 and came into medical use in 2001.[3] Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Interactions 4 Pharmacology 4.1 Pharmacodynamics 4.2 Pharmacokinetics 4.3 Pharmacogenomics 5 Society and culture 5.1 Economics 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Medical uses Desloratadine is used to treat ...

Clarinex D 24 Hour Desloratadine + Pseudoephedrine Sulfate

Desloratadine (trade names Clarinex and Aerius) is a tricyclic H1 antagonist that is used to treat allergies. It is an active metabolite of loratadine. It was patented in 1984 and came into medical use in 2001.[3] Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Interactions 4 Pharmacology 4.1 Pharmacodynamics 4.2 Pharmacokinetics 4.3 Pharmacogenomics 5 Society and culture 5.1 Economics 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Medical uses Desloratadine is used to treat ...

Clarinex-D 12 Hour Desloratadine + Pseudoephedrine Sulfate

Desloratadine (trade names Clarinex and Aerius) is a tricyclic H1 antagonist that is used to treat allergies. It is an active metabolite of loratadine. It was patented in 1984 and came into medical use in 2001.[3] Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Interactions 4 Pharmacology 4.1 Pharmacodynamics 4.2 Pharmacokinetics 4.3 Pharmacogenomics 5 Society and culture 5.1 Economics 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Medical uses Desloratadine is used to treat ...

Desloratadine + Pseudoephedrine Drug Index

Desloratadine (trade names Clarinex and Aerius) is a tricyclic H1 antagonist that is used to treat allergies. It is an active metabolite of loratadine. It was patented in 1984 and came into medical use in 2001.[3] Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Interactions 4 Pharmacology 4.1 Pharmacodynamics 4.2 Pharmacokinetics 4.3 Pharmacogenomics 5 Society and culture 5.1 Economics 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Medical uses Desloratadine is used to treat ...

Desloratadine + Pseudoephedrine Sulfate Drug Index

Desloratadine (trade names Clarinex and Aerius) is a tricyclic H1 antagonist that is used to treat allergies. It is an active metabolite of loratadine. It was patented in 1984 and came into medical use in 2001.[3] Contents 1 Medical uses 2 Side effects 3 Interactions 4 Pharmacology 4.1 Pharmacodynamics 4.2 Pharmacokinetics 4.3 Pharmacogenomics 5 Society and culture 5.1 Economics 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Medical uses Desloratadine is used to treat ...

10 mg film coated tablet, red printed named; montemax is the brand; montelukast is the generic, color is of light orange?; it is presribed to me as medicine for 14 days for my ear problem, i am experiencing fullness of ear with tinnitus, recommended one tablet a day before bed . i am also taking AERIUS 5mg a day ## Brains and Brawn ## Hi I have been taking Montelukast /Singular and I experienced a full ear sensation for at least one week. I blew out my ears a few times by holding my nose. The fullness went away but now I have low hissing white noise in one ear tinnitus. After researching this drug I have stopped it ASAP. I can only hope that this will go away. I am reporting this to my allergy doctor. I go for my second ENT appt next week. ## I recently took 500mg vitamin c tablets and ...

3 REPLIES Filed under Montelukast

Amal round blue pill with only "SP" engraved on one side. No numbers or lines. Just the letters and only on one side ## Hi Hadley, I located a small round blue pill with an italicized SP engraving on one side, which turned out to be the logo for "Schering Plough". Apparently there have been previous reports of this pill suggesting that it contains 5mgs of Aerius (desloratadine); an antihistamine used for allergies and hay fever. If you run a search on google images for "Aerius (desloratadine 5 mg) SP" and scroll down a bit, there should be a few different pill images that accurately portray what it's supposed to look like. Please post back if you think your pill might be something else.

1 REPLY Filed under Aerius

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