Does BISOPROLOL Cause Increased bronchial secretion? 13 Reports in FDA Database
Lower Your Cholesterol — The Natural Way
The Oxidized Cholesterol Strategy: a science-backed plan for heart health.
According to the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS), 13 reports of Increased bronchial secretion have been filed in association with BISOPROLOL (bisoprolol fumarate and hydrochlorothiazide). This represents 0.1% of all adverse event reports for BISOPROLOL.
13
Reports of Increased bronchial secretion with BISOPROLOL
0.1%
of all BISOPROLOL reports
0
Deaths
13
Hospitalizations
How Dangerous Is Increased bronchial secretion From BISOPROLOL?
Of the 13 reports, 13 (100.0%) required hospitalization.
Is Increased bronchial secretion Listed in the Official Label?
This adverse event is not currently listed in the official FDA drug label for BISOPROLOL. However, 13 reports have been filed with the FAERS database.
What Other Side Effects Does BISOPROLOL Cause?
Dyspnoea (2,940)
Bradycardia (2,535)
Hypotension (2,504)
Dizziness (2,153)
Fall (2,011)
Fatigue (1,983)
Acute kidney injury (1,894)
Malaise (1,602)
Drug ineffective (1,486)
Nausea (1,460)
What Other Drugs Cause Increased bronchial secretion?
ALBUTEROL (637)
OMALIZUMAB (144)
MEPOLIZUMAB (119)
FLUTICASONE FUROATE\UMECLIDINIUM\VILANTEROL TRIFENATATE (93)
FLUTICASONE FUROATE\VILANTEROL TRIFENATATE (87)
FLUTICASONE\SALMETEROL (86)
FLUTICASONE (82)
PREDNISONE (74)
TIOTROPIUM (65)
BUDESONIDE\FORMOTEROL (63)
Which BISOPROLOL Alternatives Have Lower Increased bronchial secretion Risk?
BISOPROLOL vs BISOPROLOL\BISOPROLOL
BISOPROLOL vs BISOPROLOL\HYDROCHLOROTHIAZIDE
BISOPROLOL vs BIVALIRUDIN
BISOPROLOL vs BLEOMYCIN
BISOPROLOL vs BLINATUMOMAB