Fluticasone is a steroid inhaler. Fostair is a combination inhaler (so has a LABA). Technically fostair would be classed as a higher level drug
I’m assuming you’ve done the LAMA inhalers and all the tablet options (monte/theo etc etc) and that they’ve checked for your comorbidities and got them under control (like allergies/reflux etc etc)
Have you tried the inhalers like relvar? That’s the other one lots of people go on. Do you do better with DPIs or MDIs?
I was changed to fostairnexthaler as the particles are smaller and can penetrate the lung deeper than some other inhalers It has helped me compared to the seretide and qvar x
It's not really a case of Fostair being stronger than fluticasone because it contains beclometasone dipropionate as an alternative steroid. But, as EmmaF91 says, it also has formoterol as a long-acting bronchodilator, so you are getting the benefit of two medications. Also, since salbutamol is short-acting, formoterol might be better in the long-term.
Fostair is often promoted because it is cheap, but it works very well for some people. I appear to be sensitive to the aerosol in inhalers, so I use a dry powder one, but this is a personal issue, which shouldn't put you off trying Fostair, or any other combination inhaler, if your medical professional suggests it when you next have a conversation about your treatment.
It has been the only thing that works for me and I discovered it by accident when a friend recommended it. It is worth a try. Good luck with it, try the pressurised one not the fostair nexus, it's more effective if lung capacity isn't great.
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