What You Should Know About Medicines/Nasal Spray

Nasal sprays are medications that are absorbed through the mucous membranes in the nose. Some examples of medications that come in a nasal spray include naloxone[1] as well as many allergy medications[2]. In these medications, this route is preferred due to it's ease of administration by a layperson, ability for medication to be applied directly to areas that have symptoms, and how they are easier to give to children and infants compared to oral medications.
How to Use
[edit | edit source]There are three main types of nasal spray devices, this guide will cover all of them.
Pressurized Canisters
[edit | edit source]This style is most similar to an inhaler, such as for asthma, but for your nose.
- Blow your nose, ensuring that you can breath through the nostril(s)
- Shake the medicine canister to ensure the medicine is mixed
- Hold your head upright as you breath out
- Insert the tip of the canister a few centimetres into the nose, pressing the other nostril shut
- Press the canister down to dispense the medicine while you breathe in through your nose [3]
Pump Bottles
[edit | edit source]This is the most common style for over the counter medications, see the picture in this article for an example of one.
- Blow your nose, ensuring you can breath through the nostril(s)
- Shake the bottle, then prime it, by depressing the pump a few times, until medicine sprays out, just like you have to do the first time you use a bottle of hand soap
- Lean forwards, covering the other nostril
- Insert the tip of the bottle into the nostril, holding two fingers on the wings of the product
- Squeeze the wings and the bottom of the bottle together to release the medication while you breath in
Plunger Devices
[edit | edit source]The quintessential medication used by this style is narcan, for opioid overdoses. These are made so it is easy to give to someone else.
- Hold the device with two fingers on either side of the nozzle, and one finger on the plunger.
- Insert the device into the victims nostril, and forcibly push the plunger in to dispense the medication.[4]
- ↑ Naloxone SAMSHA
- ↑ Nasal Sprays The American Academy of Asthma, Allergies, and Immunology.
- ↑ How to use Nasal Medications, American Association of Family Physicians
- ↑ Naloxone usage instructions, USA VA