Long acting relievers work in a similar way to the short acting anti-muscarinics but as the name suggest, their effect lasts for longer, 12-24 hours, depending on drug. If you are taking one of these long acting anti-muscarinics, then you should no longer be taking a short acting anti-muscarinic (ipratropium).
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Medicine name | Device | How its taken | Side effects |
---|---|---|---|
Tiotropium (Spiriva®) | Handihaler, Respimat | Reliever – taken regularly once a day. | All medicines have side-effects
These side effects are short lasting and common. They are not a reason to stop taking the inhaler. Most people tolerate these mild side effects. If you are in any doubt contact your GP or respiratory team. |
Aclidinium (Eklira®) | Genuair | Reliever – taken once every morning and evening. | All medicines have side-effects
These side effects are short lasting and common. They are not a reason to stop taking the inhaler. Most people tolerate these mild side effects. If you are in any doubt contact your GP or respiratory team. |
Glyccopyronium (Seebri®) | Breezhaler | Reliever – taken regularly once a day. | All medicines have side-effects
These side effects are short lasting and common. They are not a reason to stop taking the inhaler. Most people tolerate these mild side effects. If you are in any doubt contact your GP or respiratory team. |
Umeclidnium (Incruse®) | Ellipta | Reliever – taken regularly once a day. | All medicines have side-effects
These side effects are short lasting and common. They are not a reason to stop taking the inhaler. Most people tolerate these mild side effects. If you are in any doubt contact your GP or respiratory team. |
Please note:
These are the most commonly used inhalers at the time of publication of this website. If you do not see your inhaler you can speak to your GP or pharmacist or check the patient information leaflet for your inhaler and medication.