Tessalon Liquid Capsules for Adults Dangerous for Children

Since it is cough season and many adults are being prescribed diagnosed Tessalon (Perles), a liquid capsule to alleviate coughing; parents beware and lock this medicine away, so children younger than 10 years can’t get it.  Can be fatal! ~ Nurse Mommy

FDA PRESS RELEASE

For Immediate Release: Dec. 14, 2010

FDA says Tessalon liquid cough capsules pose risk for young children
Medication has candy-like appearance; should be kept in child-proof containers

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is warning that accidental ingestion of Tessalon (benzonatate) by children younger than 10 years can result in serious side effects or death.

Tessalon, approved by the FDA to treat symptomatic relief of cough in patients older than 10, may attract younger children because of the drug’s candy-like appearance – a round, liquid-filled gelatin capsule. The safety and effectiveness of benzonatate in children younger than 10 years has not been established.

“Benzonatate should be kept in a child-resistant container and stored out of reach of children,” said Carol Holquist, R.Ph., director of FDA’s Division of Medication Error Prevention and Analysis. “The FDA encourages health care professionals to talk with their patients and those caring for children about the risk of accidental ingestion or overdose.”

A review of the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System database from 1982 through May 2010 identified seven cases of accidental ingestion associated with benzonatate in children younger than 10. Five of the cases resulted in death in children ages 2 years and younger. Overdose with benzonatate in children younger than 2 years has been reported following accidental ingestion of only one or two benzonatate capsules.

Common adverse events reported in the overdose cases included cardiac arrest, coma, and convulsion. Signs and symptoms of overdose can occur within 15-20 minutes of ingestion. Some of the deaths reported in children have been within hours of the accidental ingestion.

The FDA is also adding a new Warning and Precaution section to the benzonatate drug label to warn health care professionals about accidental ingestion resulting in overdose and death in children younger than 10.

Consumers and health care professionals are encouraged to report adverse side effects or medication errors from the use of benzonatate to the FDA’s MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program at www.fda.gov/MedWatch or by calling 800-332-1088.

More mucus? You’ve Got to Be Kidding me!!

“KNOCK, KNOCK”
“Who’s there?

“ACH”
“Ach- who?”
“GOD BLESS YOU!”

Why is it whenever my children get sick, I always catch it and my husband doesn’t?  Is it since I carried the mucus mongers in my womb at one time, I have a stronger attachment to them and am therefore more prone to contract every sniffle, cough and ache?  Is it because I married a super hero who has an invisible virus shield as a pocket protector? Perhaps.

A doctor I visited recently (not my regular doc), asked me point blank, “Why are you getting sick so often this year?”  Now if I really knew that answer, don’t you think I would be working on the prevention and not be sitting in her drab office in search of the miracle cure? Next question please, Doc…

Now I am not criticizing all doctors.  I love doctors – that’s why I need to have a personal one on pager at all times during the cold and flu season.  Argh!!!

Parents out there – do you seem to be catching everything your kids are getting this year?  I don’t remember my mother catching every bug I got.  Of course that was only a few decades ago, and my memory is like a steel trap.  Isn’t yours?

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