The most popular nasal decongestant on U.S. pharmacy shelves may not be there much longer. The Food and Drug Administration recently announced plans to phase out phenylephrine, the key ingredient some cold and allergy pills.
Summary
The FDA has proposed phasing out oral phenylephrine, a common decongestant in cold medicines like Sudafed PE and DayQuil, after studies showed it is no more effective than a placebo.
The drug, ineffective when swallowed due to breakdown in the stomach, remains usable in nasal sprays.
Alternatives include pseudoephedrine, nasal sprays, and steroid treatments like Flonase.
The regulatory process to remove phenylephrine could take over a year, but experts argue removing ineffective options will help consumers choose better remedies for congestion. Drugmakers are expected to challenge the proposal.
The problem is that it is legally an evil drug because you can make meth from it, so it remains heavily restricted. There are more effective ways to make meth at commercial scale than by buying and crushing up cold and flu tablets, but it’s a question of moral principle, i.e. not condoning evil.
With this asinine logic, buying apples are condoning evil because their seeds contain cyanide and though there are more effective ways to create cyanide at commercial scale than buying apples and extracting the small amount of cyanide from the seeds it's still a question of moral principle i.e not condoning evil.
They spend more money and chemistry making pseudoephedrine hard to make into meth then they do on the everything else in the medicine. It's also why meth labs tend to blow up when they didn't with with standard pseudoephedrine.
It's not that hard. The only real issue is when the pharmacy is closed and you're trying to buy one a holiday or after-hours. I just keep some spare pseudoephedrine in the medicine cabinet to hold me over until the pharmacy opens.
phenylephrine is effective as a nasal spray, not in tablet or liquid (i.e. taken orally).
drug makers were all in a panic over lost sales due to pseudoephedrine getting put behind the counter. they basically lied to everyone about phenylephrine's effectiveness when they put it in all the stuff sold on retail shelves just to protect their fucking profits.
For now, the Consumer Healthcare Products Association — which represents medicine makers — wants the products to stay available, saying Americans deserve “the option to choose the products they prefer for self-care.”
Hatton says he and his colleagues disagree: “Our position is that choosing from something that doesn’t work isn’t really a choice.”
Can you please edit your post to say a common decongestant in cold medicines such as Sudafed PE? It's inaccurate to say it's in Sudafed.
Sudafed is the brand name for pseudoephedrine and it very much is effective. Phenylephrine is in the Sudafed PE which only exists because you need to use a driver's license to get Sudafed from the pharmacy in the US.
Goddamn pseudoephedrine is the best, hands down. I have allergies that routinely stuff me up and I vehemently hate fucking tweakers for trying to ruin one of the most effective over the counter drugs out there.
My work won't allow it. I'm just getting over a horrible sickness after I spread it to everyone at work. Boss didn't come in for a week, but we had to be there. There needs to be laws.
First time I tried the Micromist nasal spray I was 100% blocked up and had no expectations of it working. After a couple of minutes my nose was completely unblocked.
I still use it now and then as my nostrils alternate being blocked and some days I just can't put up with it or struggle to sleep. But you have to take long breaks from using it as you get "blowback" where symptoms come back hard if you use it for too long and then stop.
This is sold as Afrin in the US. Can confirm it works amazingly well. Can also confirm that long term use (more than a few days) will mess you up pretty badly due to rebound congestion.
Yeah, the Pseudoephedrine does what it says it does, I was using Tylenol cold/Flu (daytime meds have that on it) years ago when I came down with something nasty, made me not feel like death. It's an amphetamine so those on stim meds (like myself since then) should talk to your pharmacist first, mixing stims isn't a great idea.