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Scott C.
Gottlieb
Injury Law Attorney
29 Riverside Drive
Binghamton, NY 13905
Phone: 607-724-7700
Fax: 607-724-5370 |
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Glossary of Prescription Drug Terms
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Click on the first letter of the word from the list above to
go to the appropriate section of the glossary. Contact us if you would like a
personal injury law glossary or one of other legal glossaries for your website.
Legal Glossaries Main Page
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P -
PPA: A chemical used in over the counter and
prescription medications. PPA was very common in
diet drugs, nasal decongestants and cough
medications. PPA might cause between 200 and 500
hemorrhagic strokes per year in patients age 18 to
49. U.S. consumers bought about 6 billion doses of
PPA last year. Popular PPA Products containing PPA
include:
- Dexatrim Weight Control Candy and Tablets
- Acutrim Weight Control Candy and Tablets
- Permathene Mega 16 Weight Control Tablets
- Robitussin CF Cough Syrup
- Triaminic DM Cough Syrup
- Tavist D Cold, allergy and sinus tablet
On November 6, 2000, while regulators moved to take
it off the market, U.S. health officials urged
consumers to stop taking decongestants and diet
drugs containing a key ingredient linked to cases of
strokes. The ingredient, phenylpropanolamine (PPA),
is found in hundreds of over-the-counter and
prescription products, including the cold medicine
Dimetapp and such weight-loss drugs as Dexatrim and
Acutrim. It works as a decongestant in cough and
cold remedies and as an appetite suppressant in diet
drugs. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said
it has asked all drug companies to voluntarily stop
marketing products containing PPA. Makers would have
the option to reformulate the products with other
ingredients. The agency also is writing a proposal
that will make the sale of PPA products, both
prescription and over-the-counter, illegal. That
process is likely to take several months. Regulators
determined that PPA is linked to cases of bleeding
strokes in adults under age 50. Research pointed to
a higher risk of hemorrhagic strokes, or bleeding
into the brain, for women, but the FDA cautioned
that men were also at risk. The strokes occurred
within three days after people took the products.
Other popular products that contain PPA include some
versions of Alka-Seltzer Plus, Comtrex, Coricidin,
Tavist-D and Triaminic.
Paxil: An antidepressant drug belonging to a class
of medications known as selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors (SSRIs). Paxil is believed to be very
addictive, and many users report severe withdrawal
symptoms after discontinuing use. Some experts even
link Paxil to an increased suicide risk. The
manufacturer has been accused of misleading the
public and medical profession by downplaying side
effects.
Peremptory Challenge: A challenge to a particular
juror that requires no reason. Normally an attorney
has a limited number of these challenges.
Percocet: A prescription pain reliever containing Oxycodone and acetaminophen. Classified in the same
category as Oxycontin, Percocet contains no more
than 5mg of Oxycodone.
Percodan: A prescription pain reliever containing Oycodone and aspirin. Classified in the same
category as Oxycontin, Percodan-Demi only contains
2.25mg of Oxycodone.
Petition: A formal request that the court take some
action; a complaint.
Personal Property: Defined by the law as “things
movable.” This is distinguished from the term “real
property,” which includes things such as trees,
buildings and land.
Pharmacology: The scientific discipline that studies
the action of drugs on living systems (animals or
human beings).
PHASE 1, 2, 3, 4 DRUG TRIALS: Different stages of
testing drugs in humans, from first application in
humans (Phase 1) through limited and broad clinical
tests (Phase 3), to post-marketing studies (Phase
4).
- PHASE 1 DRUG TRIAL Phase 1 trials include the
initial introduction of an investigational new drug
into humans. These studies are typically conducted
with healthy volunteers; sometimes, where the drug
is intended for use in patients with a particular
disease, however, such patients may participate as
subjects. Phase 1 trials are designed to determine
the metabolic and pharmacological actions of the
drug in humans, the side effects associated with
increasing doses (to establish a safe dose range),
and, if possible, to gain early evidence of
effectiveness; they are typically closely monitored.
The ultimate goal of Phase 1 trials is to obtain
sufficient information about the drug's
pharmacokinetics and pharmacological effects to
permit the design of well-controlled, sufficiently
valid Phase 2 studies.
- PHASE 2 DRUG TRIAL Phase 2 trials include
controlled clinical studies conducted to evaluate
the drug's effectiveness for a particular indication
in patients with the disease or condition under
study, and to determine the common short-term side
effects and risks associated with the drug. These
studies are typically well-controlled, closely
monitored, and conducted with a relatively small
number of patients, usually involving no more than
several hundred subjects.
- PHASE 3 DRUG TRIAL Phase 3 trials involve the
administration of a new drug to a larger number of
patients in different clinical settings to determine
its safety, efficacy, and appropriate dosage. They
are performed after preliminary evidence of
effectiveness has been obtained, and are intended to
gather necessary additional information about
effectiveness and safety for evaluating the overall
benefit-risk relationship of the drug, and to
provide and adequate basis for physician labeling.
In Phase 3 studies, the drug is used the way it
would be administered when marketed. When these
studies are completed and the sponsor believes that
the drug is safe and effective under specific
conditions, the sponsor applies to the FDA for
approval to market the drug.
- PHASE 4 DRUG TRIAL Concurrent with marketing
approval, FDA may seek agreement from the sponsor to
conduct certain post-marketing (Phase 4) studies to
delineate additional information about the drug's
risks, benefits, and optimal use. These studies
could include studying different doses or schedules
of administration than were used in Phase 2 studies,
use of the drug in other patient populations or
other stages of the disease, or use of the drug over
a longer period of time.
Physical Dependence: A physiological need for a
substance, the absence of which leads to withdrawal.
Physical dependence is distinguishable from
addiction in that addiction also involves mental
fixation.
Placebo: A chemically inert substance given in the
guise of medicine for its psychologically suggestive
effect; used in controlled clinical trials to
determine whether improvement and side effects may
reflect imagination or anticipation rather than
actual power of a drug.
Plaintiff: The party bringing the case against
another.
Pleading: The process of making formal, written
statements by litigants during a lawsuit. All papers
filed with the court are collectively referred to as
“pleadings.”
Prempro: A hormone replacement therapy (HRT) drug
prescribed to treat menopause symptoms, Prempro® was
recently a subject of a drug recall. It was pulled
from shelves in 2002 after the Women's Health
Initiative Study found that it increased women' s
risk of stroke by 41 percent, cardiovascular disease
by 29 percent, and breast cancer by 26 percent.
Warnings from the American Heart Association and the
Journal of the American Medical Association also
prompted the recall.
Precedent: The value that a completed case has on
deciding future cases.
Process Serving: The method by which a defendant in
a lawsuit is notified that a plaintiff has filed a
suit against him.
Product liability: A manufacturer of a product may
be held liable for damage caused by that product if
it was somehow defective, to the point that it was
unreasonably dangerous to the consumer. A product
can be defective in 3 ways: Manufacturing Defect
(When one particular product out of many like
products has a flaw that makes it unreasonably
dangerous, it is said to have a manufacturing
defect); Design Defect (If the actual design makes
it unreasonably dangerous); Information Defect or
Failure to Warn (A defendant may be liable for not
adequately warning of a product’s risk that were
known in light of scientific knowledge at the time
of manufacturing).
Pro Se: On one’s own behalf; not using an attorney.
Propulsid: Propulsid (Cisapride) may cause irregular
heartbeats and even sudden death. At least 341
reports of heart-rhythm abnormalities, including 80
reports of deaths, have been associated with
Propulsid. Report of deaths and hospitalizations
have mounted since the FDA first warned that
Propulsid can cause serious heart problems in June
1998. Some 30 million U.S. residents, including
President Clinton, have taken the medication since
it hit the market in 1993 for Gastroesophageal
Reflux Disease (GERD). Propulsid can cause serious
side effects such as:
- Sudden cardiac death
- Heart attack
- Irregular heartbeat
- QT interval prolongation
After the drug's approval in 1993, there were
several revisions to the Propulsid label, informing
health care professionals and patients about various
side effects and risks, the most serious of which
involved cardiac irregularities. Although Propulsid
was only associated with mild adverse effects upon
approval, the drug was soon linked to
life-threatening heart rhythm abnormalities
(arrhythmias) and cardiac arrest in people with no
prior heart disease. After years of escalating
fatalities and pressure from the FDA, Janssen
Pharmaceutical Inc., a division of Johnson &
Johnson, announced that it would voluntarily stop
marketing Propulsid in the United States beginning
July 14, 2000.
Purity: The relative absence of extraneous matter in
a drug or vaccine that may or may not be harmful to
the recipient or deleterious to the product.
Punitive Damages: Damages given for the purpose of
punishing the defendant
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