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Syrup

Allermine 2 mg/5 ml Syrup

Generic: Chlorpheniramine Maleate

Manufacturer: Renata PLC

Therapeutic class: First-generation (sedating) antihistamine

What is Allermine?

Allermine 2 mg/5 ml syrup is a medicine from Renata PLC containing the generic Chlorpheniramine Maleate. It is one of the oldest and most familiar antihistamines in Bangladesh, used for decades to relieve allergy symptoms — runny nose, sneezing, itchy watery eyes, skin rashes, hives and itching — and often included in cough-cold preparations. It is inexpensive, fast-acting and effective, though it commonly causes drowsiness.

Chlorpheniramine works by blocking histamine H1 receptors. Histamine is the chemical your body releases during an allergic reaction; it makes small blood vessels leak, the nose run and the skin itch and swell. By occupying histamine's receptors, the medicine prevents these effects. Because it is a first-generation antihistamine, it also crosses into the brain, which explains both the sleepiness it causes and its usefulness at bedtime when itching disturbs sleep.

Indications

Allermine is used for:

  • Allergic rhinitis and hay fever — sneezing, runny and itchy nose, itchy watery eyes.
  • Urticaria (hives) and itchy skin conditions — including allergic rashes and reactions to foods or medicines.
  • Insect bites and stings — to relieve itching and swelling.
  • Common cold symptoms — drying a runny nose, often within combination remedies.
  • Itching of chickenpox and other conditions — particularly at night.
  • Allergic reactions — as supportive treatment under medical supervision; severe anaphylaxis always needs emergency care first.

Dosage & Administration

Follow the dose your doctor or pharmacist advises for Allermine. For adults the usual dose is 4 mg every 4–6 hours as needed, not exceeding 24 mg in 24 hours. Children need smaller, age-based doses (commonly 1–2 mg every 4–6 hours depending on age) — always confirm a child's dose with a doctor, and do not give to children under 2 years without medical advice.

  • Take it with or without food; a bedtime dose is often chosen when itching disturbs sleep.
  • Use the lowest dose that controls symptoms for the shortest time needed.
  • If a scheduled dose is missed, take it when remembered unless the next is near — never double.
  • If symptoms persist beyond a few days, see a doctor rather than continuing on your own.

Side Effects

The side effects of Allermine mostly stem from its action on the brain:

  • Drowsiness and sleepiness — very common; reaction time slows even when you feel "only slightly" sleepy. Do not drive, ride a motorcycle or operate machines after taking it.
  • Dry mouth, nose and throat.
  • Dizziness, poor concentration, blurred vision.
  • Constipation or difficulty passing urine — more likely in older men with prostate enlargement.
  • Thickened airway secretions.
  • Paradoxical excitement in children — restlessness or irritability instead of sleepiness.
  • Elderly people are more prone to confusion, falls and urinary retention.

Precautions & Warnings

Take these precautions with Allermine:

  • No driving or machine operation after a dose — plan doses around travel and work; choose bedtime dosing where possible.
  • Avoid alcohol and other sedatives — sleepiness multiplies dangerously.
  • Tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, prostate enlargement or urinary difficulty, epilepsy, asthma or COPD, liver disease, or thyroid or heart problems.
  • Elderly patients should use lower doses and prefer non-sedating alternatives where suitable.
  • Do not combine with other cough-cold remedies that may already contain an antihistamine — risk of accidental double dosing.
  • It is for short-term symptom relief; persistent allergy needs a doctor's assessment.

Drug Interactions

Interactions to know with Allermine:

  • Alcohol — strongly increases drowsiness and impairment; avoid completely while taking it.
  • Sleeping pills, anxiolytics, opioid painkillers and sedating antidepressants — additive sedation and breathing suppression risk.
  • MAO-inhibitor antidepressants — intensify and prolong the drying (anticholinergic) effects; combination contraindicated.
  • Other anticholinergic drugs (some antispasmodics, tricyclic antidepressants, antiparkinson drugs) — added dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention and confusion.
  • Phenytoin — its level may rise.
  • Other antihistamines or combination cold remedies — duplication risk.

Contraindications

Allermine should not be used in:

  • Allergy to chlorpheniramine or any component.
  • Newborns and premature infants — and not in children under 2 years without a doctor's order.
  • Patients on MAO-inhibitor antidepressants (currently or within the last 14 days).
  • Narrow-angle glaucoma.
  • Urinary retention or significant prostate enlargement.
  • Severe asthma attack — secretions thicken and may worsen breathing.
  • Stenosing peptic ulcer or pyloroduodenal obstruction.

Pregnancy & Lactation

Pregnancy: Chlorpheniramine has decades of use and is often considered one of the preferred antihistamines when one is genuinely needed in pregnancy — but "often used" is not "use freely". Take Allermine in pregnancy only after consulting your doctor, at the lowest effective dose for the shortest time, and avoid it near delivery because of possible effects on the newborn.

Breastfeeding: Small amounts pass into breast milk; the drug may make the baby drowsy or irritable and can reduce milk supply, especially with repeated doses or when combined with decongestants. Prefer a non-sedating antihistamine if treatment is needed — ask your doctor. If a dose is taken, watch the baby for sleepiness or poor feeding.

Storage Conditions

Store Allermine below 30°C in a dry place away from light and moisture; keep syrup bottles tightly closed and never refrigerate unless the label says so. As antihistamine syrups are sweet and attractive to children, be especially careful to keep this medicine locked away out of their reach and sight. Do not use after the expiry date, and return unused expired medicine to a pharmacy for disposal.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I drive or ride a motorcycle after taking Allermine?

<p>No — you should not. Allermine is a sedating antihistamine: it slows your reaction time, dulls concentration and can blur vision for several hours after a dose, even when you feel only mildly sleepy or not sleepy at all. On Bangladeshi roads that impairment is genuinely dangerous, for drivers and motorcycle or rickshaw operators alike. Plan your doses so you are not travelling as the effect peaks, prefer the bedtime dose, and if you must stay alert during the day, ask your doctor about a non-drowsy antihistamine such as fexofenadine or loratadine instead.</p>

Why does Allermine make me so sleepy when newer allergy tablets do not?

<p>Allermine is a first-generation antihistamine. Its molecules are small and fat-soluble, so they cross the blood-brain barrier easily and block histamine receptors inside the brain — and brain histamine is one of the signals that keeps you awake. Blocking it brings drowsiness along with the allergy relief. Newer second-generation antihistamines (fexofenadine, loratadine, cetirizine and others) were designed to stay largely outside the brain, so they calm the allergy with little or no sleepiness. The sedation can occasionally be useful — for example when night-time itching ruins sleep — but it is the main reason this medicine needs respect.</p>

Is it safe to give Allermine to my child for a runny nose?

<p>Only with a doctor's advice. Allermine must not be given to babies under 2 years, and for older children the dose must be carefully matched to age and weight — adult tablets or guesswork measuring of syrup are how accidental overdoses happen. Children can also react paradoxically, becoming restless, excited or irritable instead of sleepy. For an ordinary cold, saline nose drops, fluids and rest help most children just as well. If allergy symptoms keep returning, let a doctor confirm the cause and choose an age-appropriate antihistamine rather than treating repeatedly at home.</p>

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