16 days ago on Jan 17, 2009 by chris555, #16131
Sorry to disappoint you, but I have no vested interest in Merck or any other pharmaceutical company for that matter. What I have a vested interest in is providing some balance to those parents who come to this blog site and are scared to death. That is what happened to a very good friend of mine. After reading the posts here, she was so panicked she took her 12 year old off Singulair. A kid who had no problems on it by the way. A few days later my friends kid was rushed to the ER and almost died from an asthma attack. That is what I have a problem with. People here telling others the side effects will creep up, that kids should stop their medication right away, etc.
Reply 8 minutes ago on Feb 03, 2009 by concernedcitizen, #16701
To chris555:
Merck warns on it's Singulair website that Singulair is not an effective replacement for fast acting inhalers in the event of sudden symptoms. Originally when Singulair was developed it's purpose was to prevent damage and inflammation that is caused by excessive number of eosinophils in respiratory tissue. There is no evidence at all that Singulair is effective as the only treatment for asthma to prevent or treat acute asthma attacks. And, Merck makes this very clear in the warning notice.
The efficacy and safety of Singulair has a genetic component. That means that it is entirely possible that some people are not compatible with the way in which Singulair works. Adverse side effects are very possibly the result of compatibility problems.
Sadly, Merck has succumbed to the disease of "corporate greed." Meaning that they care more about profitability and the shareholders than they do about the patients. For this callousness, some day this corporation will suffer the punishment. Merck has always known that the cysLT1 receptor is a gene with more than several variations. If they told doctors to watch out for side effects due to genetic variations, then they wouldn't be able to sell this drug like it's harmless - cherry chewable - candy. The adverse side effects are real. Patients started reporting them immediately when the drug was released. Singulair is dangerous to people with gene variations and it causes unnatural biochemical events to take place.
IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION
SINGULAIR will NOT replace fast-acting inhalers for sudden symptoms. You should still have rescue medication available and continue to take your other asthma medications unless your doctor tells you to stop.