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Fostair

Mickeyboy2020 profile image
7 Replies

Hi I’m new on here, I’ve seen a lot of people mention Fostair on here, I’ve had most drugs for asthma but I’ve never heard of it.

I’m a severe asthmatic and have been for approx 15 years I take salbutamol inhalers and also on fluticasone 2 puffs twice a day

Plus 9 mg prednisalone daily also on monthly infusion at The Brompton Hospital ramilizibub

( can never remember name )

Still get breathless when I excerpt myself

Can anyone tell me if this fostair is stronger than fluticasone

Thanks

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Mickeyboy2020
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EmmaF91 profile image
EmmaF91Community Ambassador

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?

Mickeyboy2020 profile image
Mickeyboy2020

Thank you Emma

watergazer profile image
watergazer

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

Mickeyboy2020 profile image
Mickeyboy2020 in reply towatergazer

Many thanks

Superzob profile image
Superzob

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.

Mickeyboy2020 profile image
Mickeyboy2020 in reply toSuperzob

Many thanks

Ambrk profile image
Ambrk

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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