Drug Discussions   Link To Us   About Us   Tell A Friend
Home |


 
 

   

View full discussion thread on HealthBoards.com:
   anyone gained alot of weight from taking advair? (Asthma board)

21st November 2002
This "new drug" is actually two older drugs that have been extensively tested and used for the last 10 years.

Advair is a combination of two drugs -- Flovent, a corticosteroid brought in to replace the more dangerous Beclovent (beclomethasone), in March 1996.

Serevent, the other component of this "new drug", has been around since February 7th, 1994.

As far as weight gain goes, whenever one is taking any kind of corticosteroid, weight gain is always listed as a side-effect. I hope Singulair is working better for you, and if you're only using Advair when you're having a bad time you should consider switching to straight Serevent as this would eliminate the corticosteroid component altogether.

I am greatly amused by those saying that the side-effects are not well known -- there were several 12-week trials done way before either drug was approved by the FDA, and since then there have been no reports of any kind of neurological damage occurring, at least not reports to reputable sources. If your friend's child was neurologically damaged by advair, I see you live in the states, I'm sure it wouldn't be out of the question for her to sue.

I don't recommend getting off inhaled corticosteroids if you can handle it, simply because the alternatives to them are no prettier, in fact, they are worse.

We'll start with the magic that is Singulair, because it's more well-known. It doesn't work for everyone because it relies on one particular component to counter the inflammation. Corticosteroids are a sort of broad-spectrum anti-inflammatory -- they work by countering the inflammatory process.

The next alternative would be an oral corticosteroid, in a dose something along the line of ... 1,000 times the size of a dose of Flovent, ... and that's the low estimate. Anybody who's ever been on prednisone will tell you that if you can avoid that altogether, you should, simply because the side-effects range from the ugly to the uncomfortable to the horrific. (My grandmother went blind from the neuropathy it can sometimes cause.)

Our next option for a maintenance medication would be a drug that's been mostly dropped by the wayside for the last 20 years -- Theophyllines. They're potent bronchodilators, taken as pills. Their range of effect is also incredibly close to their range of overdose -- and their overdose is a dangerous one. It is for this reason that people taking theophyllines are to go for blood testing every 1 to 3 months to make sure the serum levels in their blood are okay. Many people have died simply from taking doses of theophyllines too close together.

If you have problems in particular with GlaxoWellcome or the combination drug Advair, I would personally point out that Advair isn't really recommended for children under the age of 12, as Serevent doesn't exactly come in tailored dose-sizes. If you are looking for an alternative to Advair, AstraZeneca makes a combination drug called Symbicort, which contains Pulmicort (the only inhaled corticosteroid approved for children under 3) and Oxeze, which is a drug much like Serevent except faster-acting (think 15 minutes) and also coming in a half-dose size.

I've had a lot of luck with it. I suggest you try it.
Copyright ©2009 DrugTalk.com All rights reserved.
Powered by HealthBoards.com
This site is owned and operated by iCentric Corporation
Do not copy or redistribute in any form!