Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CHILDREN S FEXOFENADINE HYDROCHLORIDE HIVES versus DRIXORAL PLUS.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CHILDREN S FEXOFENADINE HYDROCHLORIDE HIVES versus DRIXORAL PLUS.
CHILDREN'S FEXOFENADINE HYDROCHLORIDE HIVES vs DRIXORAL PLUS
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Fexofenadine is a peripheral H1-receptor antagonist that selectively inhibits histamine-mediated effects on H1 receptors, reducing allergic symptoms. It does not penetrate the blood-brain barrier significantly, minimizing sedation.
DRIXORAL PLUS contains dexbrompheniramine, an antihistamine that competes with histamine for H1-receptor sites, suppressing histamine-induced symptoms; and pseudoephedrine, a sympathomimetic amine that directly acts on alpha-adrenergic receptors in the respiratory tract mucosa, causing vasoconstriction and reducing nasal congestion.
Adults and children 12 years and older: 180 mg orally once daily or 60 mg orally twice daily.
1 tablet orally every 12 hours, not to exceed 2 tablets in 24 hours.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 14.4 hours (range 11–15 hours) in healthy adults. This supports once-daily dosing. Half-life may be prolonged in patients with renal impairment (up to 19 hours).
Pseudoephedrine: ~9-16 hours (pH-dependent, longer in alkaline urine). Dexbrompheniramine: ~20-25 hours. Clinical context: multiple dosing accumulates.
Fexofenadine is primarily excreted unchanged in feces (approximately 80%) via biliary elimination, with minimal renal excretion (approximately 11%). It is not metabolized by the liver.
Renal: 50-70% unchanged for pseudoephedrine; hepatic metabolism for dexbrompheniramine with renal excretion of metabolites.
Category A/B
Category C
Antihistamine
Antihistamine/Decongestant