Viagra: Rhymes With Niagara

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Meggs

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Pretty interesting article. Just so you guys studying for part 2, take a look at pharm from other perspective. :)
http://health.discovery.com/news/healthscout/article.jsp?aid=517109&tid=10


Viagra: Rhymes With Niagara
Jan 27 2004



TUESDAY, Jan. 27 (HealthDayNews) -- Some are short, symphonic and catchy. Others are a cacophony of stubbornly unpronounceable syllables.

We're talking about the pills in your medicine cabinet.

Ever wonder how the little blue pill called Viagra got its name? Why generics often have tongue-twisting monikers? Jeanette Y. Wick, a senior clinical research pharmacist with the National Cancer Institute, explains the complexities of naming prescription drugs in an article in the January/February issue of the Journal of the American Pharmacists Association.

There are more than 9,000 generic drug names and 33,000 trademarked drug names in use in the United States, Wick notes. Proprietary names average 10.4 letters and 3.53 syllables. Generics run longer, averaging 14.4 letters and five syllables.

Generic drug names are chosen by the United States Adopted Names Council (USAN), an outfit sponsored by the American Medical Association, the United States Pharmacopeial Convention and the American Pharmacists Association. The World Health Organization's International Nonproprietary Name Committee also must approve the selected names.

The USAN aims to choose simple, informative and unique appellations. The first several letters are meant to be unique, to distinguish one drug in a particular class of medications from another. The beginning sound is followed by a stem, or sequence of letters, that is common to the drug class.

That's why the popular arthritis medicines Celebrex (celecoxib) and Bextra (valdecoxib) and Merck & Co.'s Vioxx (rofecoxib) all have generic names containing the -coxib stem. Each belongs to a class of drugs known as the cox 2 inhibitors.

The resulting alphabetic cryptogram may seem bewildering to a layperson. But to a pharmacist or prescriber, the name should contain important clues about a drug's properties and actions or chemical composition.

Similarly, USAN assigns the suffix -mab to all monoclonal antibodies, a class of drugs that targets a specific antigen in the body, such as cancer cells. That rule of drug nomenclature has yielded names like infliximab, adalimumab, rituximab and trastuzumab.

Unfortunately, many health professionals, including pharmacists, are not aware of the linguistic rules that underlie the naming of generics, Wick explains.

"At some point, pharmacists get the message by immersion. They start figuring out the drugs that end with -mab are monoclonal antibodies," she observes. "But wouldn't it be so much better if we didn't have to be immersed to understand it?"

Brand names, by contrast, are much zippier, chosen by the drug maker, subject to U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval, to appeal to patients. The FDA rejects a third of the hundreds of names proposed each year, forcing drug marketers back to the drawing board.

The FDA forbids marketers from using names that imply efficacy, Wick explains. So today's pharmacy is chock full of pills with names that subtly and indirectly convey an idea.

Pfizer Inc.'s erectile dysfunction treatment Viagra, for example, suggests vitality and rhymes with Niagara, connoting force and endurance, Wick says.

The name Levitra, a competing product co-developed by Bayer AG and GlaxoSmithKline, by contrast, drips with European cache. "Le" is French for "the" and vitra suggests vie, which is French for life. Levitra also sounds similar to the word libido.

Other naming quirks include the use of the strong-sounding consonants P, T, D, K, Q, and hard C, as well as fast sounds like X and Z. Prozac, the world's most widely prescribed antidepressant, incorporates both of those linguistic features.

Safety experts worry that the expanding pharmaceutical pipeline will yield dangerously similar names, Wick says.

A number of efforts are under way to reduce the incidence of medical errors stemming from similar-looking and similar-sounding names, says Michael R. Cohen, president of the Institute for Safe Medication Practices, a nonprofit group that monitors medication errors.

Some of the big drug makers are contracting with companies that will test their proposed drug names with real pharmacists, Cohen says. The FDA also is performing this type of testing in-house. "They want to make sure they're not approving a name that's a problem," he says.

To avoid becoming the victim of a medical error resulting from drug-name confusion, Cohen encourages consumers to know the name of the drug their doctor has prescribed, its strength and the drug's purpose.

Cohen is aware of several errors involving mix-ups of the oral diabetes drug Avandia and the anticoagulant Coumadin. While legible in print, the names can appear similar in badly written cursive. The first A in Avandia, if not fully formed, can read like a C. The final a may appear as an n.

Patients can help avoid that kind of confusion, Cohen says: "They should insist that the doctor write the purpose of the drug on the prescription."

More information

The Institute for Safe Medication Practices and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have a page devoted to errors, including those caused by sound-alike names.

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for those from india or who know abt TAJ MAHAL......viagara.......its love-via-agra.........
 
this reminds me of a true incident that took place recently...


my sister's Inlaws were visitin her from India..a very sweet elderly couple probably in their late 60's
They had already spent a month with them and planning to get back home.The last 2 days before going home, they were busy shopping for items to take with them.
They had bought this 'niagra' starch (which gives a clean starchy finish to shirts after ironing)
So her father-in law was packing all the new things into their suitcase while the mother-in-law was handing him the things one by one.
It was the time for the 'niagra' starch to be passed on.They couldnt find it for a brief moment.Maybe it mustve slipped under the bed or something...god alone knows...
he started shouting out loud.to the mom in law(MIL)..
'find the viagra ,find the viagra....wher is it....we just bought it 1 hr ago....' .So innocently,
the mom in law shouted to my sis whether she saw their 'viagra'
My sister who was busy in the kitchen was wondering wat on earth was going on with this elderly couple!!!!!
( Neither he nor his wife realised wat 'viagra' was!!!! neither one realised they had a slip of tongue!!!
My sis was soooo embarrrrrasssed....she bit her lip and tried to whisper to her MIL abt the correction.

it was such a funny true incident..when i read this thread...i remembered this!!!!!!!!!
:D :laugh:
 
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Originally posted by Callous K9
this reminds me of a true incident that took place recently...


my sister's Inlaws were visitin her from India..a very sweet elderly couple probably in their late 60's
They had already spent a month with them and planning to get back home.The last 2 days before going home, they were busy shopping for items to take with them.
They had bought this 'niagra' starch (which gives a clean starchy finish to shirts after ironing)
So her father-in law was packing all the new things into their suitcase while the mother-in-law was handing him the things one by one.
It was the time for the 'niagra' starch to be passed on.They couldnt find it for a brief moment.Maybe it mustve slipped under the bed or something...god alone knows...
he started shouting out loud.to the mom in law(MIL)..
'find the viagra ,find the viagra....wher is it....we just bought it 1 hr ago....' .So innocently,
the mom in law shouted to my sis whether she saw their 'viagra'
My sister who was busy in the kitchen was wondering wat on earth was going on with this elderly couple!!!!!
( Neither he nor his wife realised wat 'viagra' was!!!! neither one realised they had a slip of tongue!!!
My sis was soooo embarrrrrasssed....she bit her lip and tried to whisper to her MIL abt the correction.

it was such a funny true incident..when i read this thread...i remembered this!!!!!!!!!
:D :laugh:


:laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
 
Originally posted by Callous K9
this reminds me of a true incident that took place recently...






he started shouting out loud.to the mom in law(MIL)..
'find the viagra ,find the viagra....wher is it....we just bought it 1 hr ago....' .So innocently,
( Neither he nor his wife realised wat 'viagra' was!!!! neither one realised they had a slip of tongue!!!


Hummmmmmmmmm .Are you 100% sure it was a slip of tongue ??? :laugh:
 
haha sam.!!!!!
i realllllly dont expect a 69yr old with half broken bones needing viagra!!!!
 
good one callous9:laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
 
Originally posted by Callous K9
haha sam.!!!!!
i realllllly dont expect a 69yr old with half broken bones needing viagra!!!!



:laugh: :laugh: :laugh: it is not what you think .It is just to refresh their memory :laugh: .
 
Meggs !!!!!!! What have you done ???? . Since you inserted the above link about the article regarding VIAGRA & I read it....the e-mails advertising for VIAGRA products did not stop in my mailbox.


I unsubscriped myself so many times from their lists ,but every day I still get new e-mails from other different companies .Guys........ are you experiencing the same problem as me ?? .
 
Originally posted by sam3
Meggs !!!!!!! What have you done ???? . Since you inserted the above link about the article regarding VIAGRA & I read it....the e-mails advertising for VIAGRA products did not stop in my mailbox.


I unsubscriped myself so many times from their lists ,but every day I still get new e-mails from other different companies .Guys........ are you experiencing the sam problem as me ?? .

saM:laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

Good job:thumbup:

i think the adcoms have identified who needs it more.(than my sister;s inlaws:laugh: :laugh: )
 
:laugh: :laugh: :laugh:



I knew it .............!! I knew that someone is gonna accuse me of somthing .As a matter of fact I do NOT need VIAGRA..........I need somthing that has the opposit effects .:laugh:
 
:clap: :clap: :clap:
sam i congratulate u for your assets
 
Originally posted by sam3
I unsubscriped myself so many times from their lists ,but every day I still get new e-mails from other different companies .

did you know that unsusbscribing from spammers list, just confirms them that you address is a valid one? And thus they'll keep on sending you more. Just block them.
 
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