Zyrtec Medical Drug
How To Beat An Addiction To Zyrtec
How To Beat AddictionDescription
Cetirizine hydrochloride, an antihistamine, is a major metabolite of hydroxyzine, and a racemic selective H1 receptor inverse agonist used in the treatment of allergies, hay fever, angioedema, and urticaria. The structural similarity of cetirizine to hydroxyzine, and its derivation from piperazine, attribute similar adverse reactions and properties to other piperazine derivatives.
Formerly prescription-only in the US and Canada, cetirizine is now available over the counter in both countries as Zyrtec and Reactine respectively. In Australia Zyrtec is available over the counter in pharmacies and in the UK cetirizine can be sold in any outlet and is often available in supermarkets.
Pharmacology
Cetirizine crosses the blood-brain barrier only slightly, eliminating the sedative side-effect common with older antihistamines; however it still causes mild drowsiness.[1]
Administration method and metabolisation
Chewable, non-chewable, and syrup forms of cetirizine are similarly absorbed rapidly and effectively, with absorbed food minutely affecting the absorption rate which yields a peak serum level one hour after administration;[2] in a study of healthy volunteers prescribed 10mg tablets, once daily for 10 days, a mean peak serum level of 311 ng/mL was observed.[3] The metabolic effects of cetirizine are long acting; remaining in the system for a maximum of 21 hours before being excreted, the average elimination half-life is 8 hours.[2][3] 70% of the drug is excreted or eliminated by kidney function within 72 hours, and 10% is removed through urine or excrement;[2][3] of which half is observed as unchanged cetirizine compound.[2][3] Like many other antihistamine medications, cetirizine is commonly prescribed in combination with pseudoephedrine hydrochloride, a decongestant. These combinations are marketed using the same brand name as the cetirizine with a "-D" suffix (Zyrtec-D, Virlix-D, etc.)
Additionally, cetirizine HCl not sold in combination with pseudoephedrine, is commonly known and marketed in the United States under the brand name, "Zyrtec." Formerly only available by a prescription, both Zyrtec and Zyrtec-D are currently available over the counter in the United States. In the Philippines, a leading cetirizine is Aforvir. [4]
Levorotary isomer
The levorotary enantiomer of cetirizine is known as levocetirizine. It is marketed under the name of Xyzal and Xusal. It is claimed to have somewhat fewer side effects.
Kimura's disease
Cetirizine is an effective agent in the treatment of Kimura's disease, which mostly occurs in young Asian men, affecting the lymph nodes and soft tissue of the head and neck in the form of tumor-like lesions. Cetirizine's properties of being effective both in the treatment of pruritus and as an anti-inflammatory agent[5] make it suitable for the treatment of the pruritus associated with these lesions.[5] In a 2005 study, the American College of Rheumatology conducted treatments initially using prednisone, followed by steroid dosages and azathioprine, omeprazole, and calcium and vitamin D supplements over the course of two years.[6] The skin condition of the patient began to improve and the skin lesions lessened. However, there were symptoms of cushingoid and hirsutism observed before the patient was removed from the courses of steroids and placed on 10mg/day of cetirizine to prevent skin lesions;[6]an agent suitable for the treatment of pruritus associated with such lesions.[6] Asymptomatically, the patient's skin lesions disappeared after treatment with cetirizine, blood eosinophil counts became normal,[6] corticosteroid effects were resolved,[6] and a remission began within a period 2 months.[6] It is also thought that the inhibition of eosinophils may be the key to treatment of Kimura's disease due to the role of eosinophils, rather than other cells with regards to the lesions of the skin.[6]
References
1. ^ Gupta, Anubha; Chatelain, Pierre; Massingham, Roy; Jonsson, E. Niclas; Hammarlund-Udenaes, Margareta (2005-11-22). "Brain Distribution of Cetirizine Enantiomers: Comparison of Three Different Tissue-to-Plasma Partition Coefficients: Kp, Kp,u, and Kp,uu". Drug Metabolism and Disposition 34: 318. doi:10.1124/dmd.105.007211. PMID 16303872.
2. ^ a b c d Anderson, P. O., Knoben, J. E., et al. (2002), p807
3. ^ a b c d Pfizer Inc, et al. (2006), p3 -- Note; this appears as Page 2 in online print versions.
4. ^ Payne, January W (2008-01-09). "Over-the-Counter Zyrtec Is About to Arrive". U.S. News & World Report. http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/2008/01/09/over-the-counter-zyrtec-is-about-to-arrive.html.
5. ^ a b Chetrit, E. B., Amir, G., Shalit, M. (2005), p1.
6. ^ a b c d e f g Chetrit, E. B., Amir, G., Shalit, M. (2005), p2.
Tags (4)
Active Ingredients (1)
Forms of Administration (3)
Associated News (6)
- Am I an addict? A simple new test may help us get the answer!
- Rehab center strips and beats patients to cure withdrawal and addiction
- SAMHSA Accepting Applications for Grants to Expand Substance Abuse Treatment for Juvenile Courts
- Proteins and cocaine: addiction is a disease, not a question of morality
- America's First Internet Addiction Center Opens Near Seattle
- Vince Carter Sanctuary Ready To Open Doors
Associated Facilities (11849) View All
-
Southeastern New Hampshire Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services - Sorry, (BASICS) Bronx Addiction Services doesn't have a picture (BASICS) Bronx Addiction Services
-
1016 Outpatient Services -
1016 Outpatient Services -
12 and 12 Inc
Associated Users (0)
No users have been associated.
Associated Support Groups (0)
No support groups have been associated.
Recovery Store Items (251) View All
-
Art Brut Vs. Satan -
Prilosec OTC Acid Reducer, Delayed-Release Tablets, 42 Count -
Zyrtec Allergy Relief (10 mg) -
Members Mark Cetirizine Allergy, Tablets, 350-Count -
New drug options for treating seasonal allergies: Veramyst, Zyrtec-D, and Pollinex Quattro could change the way you deal with allergy symptoms.(TREATMENT): An article from: Healthy Years
Associated Medical Drugs (0)
No medical drugs have been associated.
