Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CLARITIN HIVES RELIEF versus PROMETHAZINE HYDROCHLORIDE AND CODEINE PHOSPHATE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CLARITIN HIVES RELIEF versus PROMETHAZINE HYDROCHLORIDE AND CODEINE PHOSPHATE.
CLARITIN HIVES RELIEF vs PROMETHAZINE HYDROCHLORIDE AND CODEINE PHOSPHATE
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Selective inverse agonist at histamine H1 receptors, blocking histamine-mediated effects in allergic reactions.
Promethazine is a phenothiazine derivative that antagonizes histamine H1 receptors, reducing allergic symptoms; it also has anticholinergic, antiemetic, and sedative effects. Codeine is an opioid agonist at mu-opioid receptors, producing analgesia and antitussive effects by central mechanisms.
10 mg orally once daily
Adults: 5 mL (containing promethazine 6.25 mg and codeine 10 mg) orally every 4-6 hours as needed; maximum 30 mL per day.
None Documented
None Documented
8.4 hours (range 3-20 hours) for loratadine; 28 hours (range 8.8-92 hours) for active metabolite desloratadine, allowing once-daily dosing.
Promethazine: 10-19 hours (range 5-30h); Codeine: 2.5-4 hours (rapidly metabolized); Clinical context: sustained antitussive effect from codeine despite short half-life. Half-life of promethazine extends with hepatic impairment.
Renal: ~40% as metabolites, <1% unchanged; Fecal: ~40%; Biliary: minor contribution.
Renal: Codeine and metabolites ~90% (free and conjugated), Promethazine and metabolites primarily renal; minor biliary/fecal (<5% for codeine, ~6% for promethazine).
Category C
Category A/B
Antihistamine
Antihistamine / Antiemetic