Mometasone furoate nasal spray

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If your or your child's symptoms do not improve within a few days or if they become worse, check with your doctor. You should keep track of the number of sprays you have used and throw away the bottle after you have used the marked number of sprays even if it still contains some liquid.

Before you use mometasone nasal spray for the first time, read the written directions that come with it.

mometasone furoate nasal spray

This medicine may cause children to grow more slowly than usual. Do not use a double dose to make up for a missed one.

Keep this medication in the container it came in, tightly closed, and out of reach of children. Following concomitant administration of ketoconazole, 4 out of 12 subjects in the ketoconazole treatment group (n=12) had peak plasma concentrations of mometasone furoate >200 pcg/mL on Day 9 (211 to 324 pcg/mL).

It works by blocking the release of certain natural substances that cause allergy symptoms.

Mometasone comes as a suspension (liquid) to spray in the nose. You should carry the list with you in case of emergencies.

Last Revised - 07/20/2024

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Your symptoms may improve in 1 to 2 days after you first use mometasone, but it may take 1 to 2 weeks before you feel the full benefit of mometasone.

Talk to your pharmacist about take-back programs in your community. Use mometasone on a regular schedule unless your doctor has told you to use it as needed. If you are using mometasone nasal spray to prevent or relieve hay fever or allergy symptoms, it is usually sprayed in each nostril once a day. Always lock safety caps. Do not use more or less of it or use it more often than prescribed by your doctor.

For the prevention of nasal symptoms of seasonal allergies, use mometasone nasal spray 2 to 4 weeks before the beginning of the pollen season.

An adult should help children younger than 12 years old to use mometasone nasal spray.

After the marked number of sprays has been used, the remaining sprays in the bottle might not contain the correct amount of medication.

Elimination:

Following intravenous administration, the effective plasma elimination half-life of mometasone furoate is 5.8 hours. Tell your doctor right away if you think you have been exposed to chickenpox or measles.

Talk to your doctor if you or your child have more than one of these symptoms while using this medicine: darkening of the skin, diarrhea, dizziness, fainting, loss of appetite, mental depression, nausea, skin rash, unusual tiredness or weakness, or weight loss. Do not swallow the nasal spray and be careful not to spray it into your mouth or eyes.

Each bottle of mometasone nasal spray should only be used by one person.

Point the applicator away from your face.

  • If you are using the spray for the first time, press down and release the pump ten times or until you see a fine spray.

    Avoid close contact with anyone who has chickenpox or measles if you have never had these conditions before. If you are using mometasone nasal spray to treat nasal polyps, it is usually sprayed in each nostril once or twice daily (in the morning and evening).

    Call your doctor if your symptoms get worse or do not improve after you use mometasone nasal spray.

    Mometasone nasal spray is designed to provide a certain number of sprays. Also tell your doctor if you have chicken pox, measles, or tuberculosis (TB; a type of lung infection), or if you have been around someone who has one of these conditions.

  • tell your doctor if you are pregnant, plan to become pregnant, or are breast-feeding.

    Use a medicine take-back program. Tell your doctor right away if you have white patches in the mouth or throat, or pain when eating or swallowing.