AstraZeneca
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Frequently asked questions

Click on a link below to view answers to frequently asked questions regarding the following topics:

About PULMICORT RESPULES

About Pharmacy Manufacturing

About Nebulizers

Helping Patients and Caregivers with Nebulizer Use

About helping patients and caregivers with nebulizer use

1. Where can I find information to help make nebulization easier for my patients and their parents?

Parents can learn about treating their child’s asthma with PULMICORT RESPULES at www.pulmicortrespules.com, a site specifically designed for patients and caregivers. This site offers valuable information about PULMICORT RESPULES and explains how the medicine works, how to administer it with a jet nebulizer, and how PULMICORT RESPULES will benefit children.

2. What specific tips can help parents make nebulization part of my patient’s daily routine?

Making asthma treatment a natural part of your patients’ daily routine is important but challenging. The following are just a few tips you may want to discuss with your patients' parents or caregiver.

  • Do the treatment(s) at the same time each day, so that your patients come to expect it as a regular part of the daily routine
  • Entertain children with videos, music tapes, toys, coloring books, or puzzles during treatment
  • Read books to your child.
  • Have parents put the mask on a favorite stuffed toy or doll first. Show how much fun the toy is having or how brave it is. Then have them transfer the mask to their child

Find more helpful suggestions, and other useful tools, like patient videos, asthma action plan, appointment reminders and more at Everydaykidz.com.

Indication and Important Safety Information

PULMICORT RESPULES is indicated for the maintenance treatment of asthma and as prophylactic therapy in children ages 12 months to 8 years.

PULMICORT RESPULES is not a bronchodilator and is NOT indicated for the relief of acute bronchospasm.

Common adverse events reported in clinical trials, regardless of relationship to treatment, included respiratory infection, rhinitis, coughing, otitis media, viral infection, gastroenteritis, ear infection, oral thrush/candidiasis, and epistaxis.

Inhaled corticosteroids may cause a reduction in growth velocity. The long-term effect on final adult height is unknown.

PULMICORT RESPULES, like other inhaled corticosteroids, may impact the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, especially in susceptible individuals, in young children, and in patients given high doses for prolonged periods.

Particular care is needed for patients who are transferred from systemically active corticosteroids to less systemically available corticosteroids, because deaths due to adrenal insufficiency have occurred in asthmatic patients during and after transfer from systemic corticosteroids (see WARNINGS in full Prescribing Information).

Patients taking immunosuppressant doses of corticosteroids should avoid exposure to infections such as chicken pox and measles.

[Please see accompanying full Prescribing Information (PDF).]