💡 Quick Answer
Terbicip Cream is terbinafine 1% w/w topical cream — an allylamine antifungal and the most effective topical agent for dermatophyte infections (athlete’s foot, jock itch, ringworm). Fungicidal at usual concentrations; short courses (1–2 weeks) achieve cure rates > 90% for tinea pedis. Note: not used for Candida (use clotrimazole / miconazole / ketoconazole instead). Once-daily or twice-daily application depending on indication. Persists in the stratum corneum after dosing — biological effect outlasts the application period.
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🔒 Why order Terbicip Cream from MedsBase
- WHO-GMP certified manufacturer — sourced from a regulated facility, finished pack with batch number and expiry.
- Discreet packaging — plain envelope, no medication name on the outside.
- Worldwide shipping to most countries with Reshipment Assurance.
- Loyalty points — 1 point per $1 spent (excludes peptides/shipping); 100 points = $5 off your next order.
Uses
Terbicip Cream (terbinafine 1% w/w cream, Cipla) is the topical agent of choice for dermatophyte skin infections. It is fungicidal (kills) rather than fungistatic (slows) — meaning shorter courses than clotrimazole or miconazole. Indications:
| Indication | How to use |
|---|---|
| Tinea pedis — interdigital | Twice daily × 1 week |
| Tinea pedis — moccasin / hyperkeratotic soles | Twice daily × 2 weeks |
| Tinea cruris (jock itch) | Once or twice daily × 1–2 weeks |
| Tinea corporis (ringworm) | Once or twice daily × 1–2 weeks |
| Pityriasis versicolor | Once daily × 2 weeks |
Not first-line for cutaneous Candida — terbinafine is fungistatic against Candida only. Use clotrimazole, miconazole, or ketoconazole for candidal intertrigo, balanitis, or nappy rash with thrush.
How to apply
- Wash and dry the affected area thoroughly. Drying matters as much as drug — fungi thrive in moisture.
- Apply a thin layer of cream and rub in. Cover the visible lesion plus 2 cm of healthy-looking surrounding skin.
- For tinea pedis, treat all four foot sites (between toes, soles, sides, arches) and the inside of socks/shoes (sprinkle with antifungal powder). Re-infection often comes from contaminated footwear.
- Wash hands after application.
- Complete the full course even if symptoms clear early.
How it works
Terbinafine inhibits squalene epoxidase — earlier in the ergosterol biosynthesis pathway than the CYP51 target of azoles. Squalene accumulates intracellularly (toxic) and ergosterol is depleted (membrane disruption) — the dual effect makes terbinafine fungicidal against dermatophytes. Highly lipophilic — penetrates and persists in the stratum corneum at concentrations many times above the MIC, even after stopping application.
Side effects
- Common (3–5%) — mild irritation, burning, redness, itching at the application site. Usually mild and self-limiting.
- Uncommon — contact dermatitis (true allergy or vehicle reaction).
- Rare — severe allergic reaction. Discontinue and seek medical advice.
Pregnancy & breastfeeding
Limited human data. Topical absorption is minimal (< 5%). For tinea pedis or jock itch in pregnancy, topical clotrimazole is generally preferred (more pregnancy safety data). Avoid application to the breast during breastfeeding.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is the course so much shorter than for clotrimazole?
Terbinafine is fungicidal against dermatophytes — kills them. Clotrimazole is fungistatic — slows growth and lets the immune system clear the infection. Higher kill = shorter course.
Can I use this for Candida nappy rash or balanitis?
Terbinafine is much weaker against Candida than against dermatophytes. For thrush-related nappy rash or candidal balanitis, use clotrimazole or miconazole instead.
Athlete’s foot keeps coming back — what am I missing?
Recurrence is usually about footwear, not drug. Throw out (or sterilise) old shoes that you wore through the infection. Sprinkle antifungal powder in socks and shoes. Wear breathable footwear, change socks daily, and dry between toes after every shower. Consider weekly prophylactic application of terbinafine cream during summer / sports season.
Is Terbicip Cream the same as Lamisil cream?
Yes — Lamisil is the original Novartis brand. Terbicip Cream contains the same active ingredient (terbinafine 1%), manufactured by Cipla under WHO-GMP. Bioequivalent.
Should I shower right after applying?
No — apply terbinafine after a shower, towel-dry the skin, then apply. Wait at least 4 hours before re-wetting the area. The drug needs contact time to penetrate the stratum corneum.
What about my child with ringworm on the body?
Topical terbinafine 1% twice daily × 2 weeks works well for tinea corporis in children. For scalp ringworm (tinea capitis), topical alone is not sufficient — oral therapy (terbinafine or griseofulvin) is required because the fungus lives in the hair shaft.
Can I use terbinafine cream and a steroid cream together?
Short-term combinations (terbinafine + a low-potency steroid) are sometimes used for inflamed dermatophyte infection. Steroid alone on a fungal infection makes it worse — ‘tinea incognito’. Use steroid for 3–5 days max, then antifungal alone.
Will it sting on broken skin between toes?
There can be mild burning on macerated skin in the first 1–2 days. Apply a thin layer; the irritation usually settles. If it intensifies or blisters, stop and consider an allergic contact dermatitis.
What if I have psoriasis on the same area?
Antifungal cream won’t help psoriasis. Distinguishing tinea from psoriasis on feet requires examining the nails (psoriasis pits and oil drops vs. fungal yellow / thickened plate) and sometimes scraping for microscopy. If unsure, see a dermatologist.
When should I switch to oral terbinafine?
If topical has failed despite correct use × 2–4 weeks, if lesions are very extensive (> 30% body), or for tinea capitis / onychomycosis (where topical can’t reach the infection).
Storage
Store at 15–25 °C, away from heat and direct sunlight. Replace the cap tightly. Discard 6 months after first opening. Keep out of reach of children.
Terbicip Cream (terbinafine 1 %) is the gold-standard short-course option for dermatophyte tinea, but for cutaneous Candida or Malassezia (where allylamines are weaker) Micogel Cream (miconazole 2 % topical) is the better-targeted azole alternative.
Other Antifungal Medications you may be interested in
If Terbicip Cream is unavailable, here are alternatives.
- Terbicip Cream (terbinafine 1%) — Most potent topical for athlete’s foot; 1–2 week course.
- Lulibet XL Cream (luliconazole 1%) — Newer-generation imidazole; 1-week course for cruris/corporis.
- Clocip (clotrimazole 1% cream) — Broad-spectrum, OTC standard, safe in pregnancy.
- Keto Cream (ketoconazole 2%) — Best for seborrhoeic dermatitis (Malassezia).
- Zimig (oral terbinafine 250 mg) — Step up to oral when topical fails or for extensive disease.
























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