⚡ Quick Answer — What is Furamist Nasal Spray?
Furamist Nasal Spray contains fluticasone furoate, delivered as a metered-dose nasal spray for the prevention and treatment of allergic rhinitis (hay fever) and non-allergic perennial rhinitis. Each spray delivers 27.5 mcg per spray. Onset of itch and sneeze relief is within 12 hours; full congestion relief takes 3–7 days of consistent twice-daily use. Manufactured by Cipla at WHO-GMP certified facilities.
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What Is Furamist Nasal Spray?
Furamist Nasal Spray is a nasal corticosteroid spray manufactured by Cipla. Each metered actuation delivers 27.5 mcg per spray of fluticasone furoate. Nasal steroids are first-line therapy for moderate-to-severe allergic rhinitis — they treat all four cardinal symptoms (sneeze, itch, runny nose, blocked nose) and outperform oral antihistamines for nasal blockage.
How Does Furamist Nasal Spray Work?
fluticasone furoate is a topical glucocorticoid applied directly to the nasal mucosa. It:
- Reduces eosinophil and lymphocyte infiltration in nasal tissue
- Stabilises mast cells, dampening histamine and tryptase release
- Suppresses inflammatory cytokines (IL-4, IL-5, IL-13)
- Reduces vascular permeability — less swelling, less mucus
- Restores nasal mucosal integrity with daily use
Uses and Indications
- Seasonal allergic rhinitis (hay fever, pollen-triggered)
- Perennial allergic rhinitis (dust mite, pet dander, mould)
- Non-allergic perennial rhinitis (vasomotor rhinitis)
- Chronic rhinosinusitis with or without nasal polyps
- Adjunct in nasal polyp regression
- Prevention of allergy-triggered asthma exacerbations (United Airways disease)
Furamist Nasal Spray Dosage
| Patient | Dose per nostril | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Adults & children >12 yr | 2 sprays (55 mcg) | Once daily |
| Children 6–11 yr | 1 spray (27.5 mcg) | Once daily |
| Children 2–5 yr | 1 spray | Once daily under medical supervision |
How to Use Furamist Nasal Spray Properly
- Blow your nose gently to clear mucus before use.
- Shake the bottle; if first use or unused for 14+ days, prime by spraying 4 times into the air until a fine mist appears.
- Tilt your head slightly forward — not back. Tilting back drains the spray into the throat.
- Insert the nozzle into one nostril, aim slightly outward toward the side wall (not toward the nasal septum — sniffing toward the septum risks bleeds and ulceration).
- Press the pump while breathing in gently through that nostril. Avoid forceful sniffing — it drives drug straight into the throat.
- Repeat in the other nostril.
- Wipe the nozzle clean with a dry tissue and replace the cap.
- Do not blow your nose for 15 minutes after spraying — the drug needs time to coat the mucosa.
- Use every day, not just when symptomatic — full benefit develops over 3–7 days.
Side Effects of Furamist Nasal Spray
Common:
- Mild nasal dryness or burning
- Bad taste or smell (more with combo sprays)
- Sneezing immediately after spray
- Occasional minor nosebleeds
- Throat irritation if drug drains backward
Less common:
- Headache
- Nasal septum perforation (rare; avoided by aiming nozzle outward, not toward septum)
- Increased intraocular pressure with long-term high-dose use
- Reduced sense of smell with long use
Serious (stop and seek help):
- Severe allergic reaction
- Persistent epistaxis (nosebleeds)
- Visual disturbance, eye pain
- Signs of nasal infection
Warnings and Precautions
- Aim outward, not at the septum — septal damage is the biggest preventable side effect.
- Daily use for full benefit — full effect takes 3–7 days.
- Children: follow age-appropriate doses; some products are not licensed below age 2 or 4.
- Untreated nasal infections, recent nasal surgery, or nasal trauma — wait until healed.
- Pregnancy and breastfeeding: intranasal steroids have very low systemic absorption; budesonide nasal has the most pregnancy data and is preferred.
- Glaucoma or cataracts: use cautiously with eye monitoring on long-term high doses.
- Stop and review if no benefit after 3 weeks of daily use — confirm correct technique first.
Contraindications
- Known hypersensitivity to fluticasone furoate or any formulation excipient
- Untreated nasal infection (treat first)
- Recent nasal surgery or trauma until healed
Drug Interactions
| Interacting drug | Effect | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Strong CYP3A4 inhibitors (ritonavir, ketoconazole, itraconazole, clarithromycin) | Increase systemic ICS exposure → adrenal suppression / Cushing risk | Avoid prolonged co-use; monitor cortisol if essential |
| Other inhaled or systemic corticosteroids | Additive HPA-axis suppression | Use lowest effective dose; monitor for systemic steroid effects |
| Live vaccines | Reduced immune response if high-dose ICS | Inactivated vaccines preferred during high-dose use |
Storage
- Store below 25°C, upright, protected from direct sunlight.
- Do not freeze.
- Once primed, use within the period stated on the leaflet (typically 2 months).
- Keep out of reach of children.
Related Alternatives on MedsBase
- Flixonase Nasal Spray — fluticasone nasal
- Budenase AQ Nasal Spray — budesonide nasal
- Furamist Nasal Spray — fluticasone furoate nasal
- Alaspan — loratadine antihistamine tablet
- Cetcip-L — levocetirizine tablet
Frequently Asked Questions
How is fluticasone furoate different from fluticasone propionate (Flixonase)?
Same parent molecule, different ester. Fluticasone furoate (Furamist, Avamys) has slightly higher receptor binding, longer mucosal residence time, and lower systemic absorption. Once-daily dosing is established for both. Choice usually comes down to availability and prescriber preference.
Is Furamist licensed for children?
Yes — fluticasone furoate is licensed from age 2 (Avamys product information). 1 spray each nostril once daily under medical guidance.
How fast does Furamist work?
Some itch and sneeze relief within 12 hours; full benefit by 3–7 days of consistent dosing.
Furamist Az — what is the difference?
Furamist Az adds azelastine (a topical antihistamine) to fluticasone furoate, giving combined steroid + antihistamine in one spray. Used for moderate-to-severe allergic rhinitis where steroid alone is not enough. The combination has a faster onset for itch and sneezing.
Why aim outward and not toward the bridge?
The nasal septum (the wall between the two sides of the nose) is the most easily traumatised area. Repeated spray hits cause crusting, ulceration, and rare perforation. Aiming the nozzle outward toward the side wall protects the septum.
Will Furamist help my asthma?
Indirectly — controlled allergic rhinitis reduces upper airway inflammation linked to bronchospasm.
Can I use Furamist with an oral antihistamine?
Yes — combination with loratadine, cetirizine, or levocetirizine is a layered approach for severe rhinitis. The Furamist Az already contains an antihistamine intranasally.
How long can I use Furamist?
Designed for chronic use. Annual review is reasonable for high-dose long-term users.
Is Furamist safe in pregnancy?
Nasal corticosteroids have low systemic absorption. Budesonide nasal has the most pregnancy data; fluticasone furoate has reassuring observational data.





























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