Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AFRINOL versus DRIXORAL.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AFRINOL versus DRIXORAL.
AFRINOL vs DRIXORAL
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Afrinol is a sympathomimetic amine that acts as a nasal decongestant by stimulating alpha-1 adrenergic receptors in the vascular smooth muscle of nasal blood vessels, causing vasoconstriction and reducing nasal congestion. It also has weak alpha-2 agonist activity.
Drixoral is a combination product containing dexbrompheniramine maleate, a first-generation antihistamine that competitively antagonizes histamine at H1 receptor sites, and pseudoephedrine sulfate, a sympathomimetic amine that acts as a decongestant by stimulating alpha-adrenergic receptors in the respiratory tract mucosa, causing vasoconstriction and reducing nasal congestion.
Oral: 1 tablet (pseudoephedrine 120 mg, triprolidine 2.5 mg) every 12 hours; maximum 2 tablets per day.
One pseudoephedrine 60 mg and dexbrompheniramine 2 mg tablet orally every 12 hours; maximum 2 tablets per 24 hours.
None Documented
None Documented
9–11 hours in healthy adults; prolonged to 16–18 hours in hepatic cirrhosis and up to 20 hours in severe renal impairment. Clinical context: dosing interval typically 12 hours in normal renal function.
Dexbrompheniramine: 12-15h (prolonged in renal impairment). Pseudoephedrine: 5-8h (alkaline urine slows elimination, half-life up to 20h).
Renal (approximately 70–90% as unchanged drug and metabolites), with about 10% biliary/fecal elimination. Dose adjustment required in renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min).
Drixoral contains dexbrompheniramine (renal: 30-50% unchanged, rest metabolites) and pseudoephedrine (renal: 70-90% unchanged, pH-dependent).
Category C
Category C
Decongestant
Antihistamine/Decongestant