The ingredient, called oral phenylephrine, is commonly used in cough and cold medicines. Also: Monkeys are on the loose from a South Carolina research facility; a North Carolina hospital files for ...
The FDA announced Wednesday that it would seek to pull a widely used ingredient in cough and cold medicines from the market.
When the doctor asked, I told him that Simran had been complaining of cough and cold. During the vitals check-up, her body ...
The US Food and Drug Administration has proposed to remove oral phenylephrine, widely used in cold and cough syrups.
According to new real-world research that my colleagues at Puressentiel commissioned, one third of us feel the symptoms for a ...
The common cold typically affects the upper respiratory tract, but this infection can lead to various serious respiratory ...
The FDA announced a proposal to remove oral phenylephrine – a common ingredient in many popular over-the-counter ...
FDA said its proposal was not based on safety concerns, so companies can still market oral drugs containing the common ...
This year could be a decade-high for whooping cough cases in Washington state, according to numbers by the state Department ...
The agency made the proposal after finding that the ingredient, known as oral phenylephrine, doesn’t relieve stuffy noses.
It was added to cold and flu remedies in the 1990s when another ingredient went behind the counter over illicit meth lab concerns.