Pentoxyverine
Pentoxyverine or carbetapentane is an antitussive commonly used for cough associated with illnesses like common cold. It is sold over-the-counter as Solotuss, or in combination with other medications, especially decongestants. One such product is Certuss, a combination of guaifenesin and pentoxyverine. The drug has been available in the form of drops, suspensions and suppositories.
It was formerly available over-the-counter in United States. However, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration ruled in 1987 that pentoxyverine was not generally recognized as safe and effective and ordered it to be removed from the over-the-counter market.
Uses
The drug is used for the treatment of dry cough associated with conditions such as common cold, bronchitis or sinusitis. Like codeine and other antitussives, it relieves the symptom, but does not heal the illness. No controlled clinical trials regarding the efficiency of pentoxyverine are available.Pharmacologists use the substance as a selective agonist at the sigma-1 receptor in animal and in vitro experiments.
Contraindications
Pentoxyverine is contraindicated in persons with bronchial asthma or other kinds of respiratory insufficiency, as well as angle-closure glaucoma. No data are available for the use of pentoxyverine during pregnancy, lactation, or children under two years of age, wherefore the drug must not be used under these circumstances.Antitussive drugs are not useful in patients with extensive phlegm production because they prevent coughing up the phlegm.
Adverse effects
The most common side effects are upper abdominal pain, diarrhoea, dry mouth, and nausea or vomiting. Allergic reactions of the skin like itching, rashes, hives and angiooedema are rare. The same is true for anaphylactic shock and convulsions.Overdose
Overdosage leads to drowsiness, agitation, nausea and anticholinergic effects like tachycardia, dry mouth, blurred vision, glaucoma, or urinary retention. Especially in children, pentoxyverine can cause hypoventilation, but much more seldom than codeine and other opioid antitussives.The treatment of overdosage aims at the symptoms; there are no specific antidotes available.