Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CLARITIN D versus PROMETHAZINE W DEXTROMETHORPHAN.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CLARITIN D versus PROMETHAZINE W DEXTROMETHORPHAN.
CLARITIN-D vs PROMETHAZINE W/ DEXTROMETHORPHAN
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Loratadine is a long-acting tricyclic antihistamine with selective peripheral H1 receptor antagonism. Pseudoephedrine is a sympathomimetic amine that acts as a decongestant by stimulating alpha-adrenergic receptors in the respiratory tract mucosa, causing vasoconstriction.
Promethazine is a phenothiazine derivative that acts as a histamine H1 receptor antagonist and antiemetic; dextromethorphan is a non-opioid antitussive that acts as an NMDA receptor antagonist and sigma-1 receptor agonist.
One tablet (5 mg loratadine/120 mg pseudoephedrine sulfate) orally every 12 hours; do not exceed 2 tablets in 24 hours.
5 mL (containing promethazine 6.25 mg and dextromethorphan 15 mg) orally every 4-6 hours as needed, not to exceed 30 mL (promethazine 37.5 mg, dextromethorphan 90 mg) per 24 hours.
None Documented
None Documented
Loratadine: 8-14 h (mean 11 h); desloratadine: 17-24 h (mean 21 h). Pseudoephedrine: 4-8 h (mean 6 h), prolonged in alkaline urine.
Promethazine: 9-16 h; dextromethorphan: 3-5 h (extensive metabolizers), 30-50 h (poor metabolizers). Clinical context: dosing interval typically 4-6 h for dextromethorphan; promethazine accumulates with repeated dosing.
Loratadine: 40% renal (metabolites), ~40% fecal; desloratadine: 33% renal, 66% fecal. Pseudoephedrine: 70-90% renal unchanged, 1-2% biliary.
Renal: promethazine ~6% unchanged, dextromethorphan ~0.5% unchanged; metabolites primarily renal. Biliary/fecal: minor routes for both.
Category C
Category A/B
Antihistamine/Decongestant Combination
Antihistamine / Antiemetic