The Daily Courier

In rare cases, brand name meds a must

- — K.W. KEITH ROACH — D.T. Readers may email questions to ToYourGood­Health@med.cornell.edu or send mail to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, Fla., U.S.A., 32803.

DEAR DR. ROACH: I just read your article that there wasn’t any difference between Synthroid and levothyrox­ine.

I come from a family with severe sensitivit­ies, allergies and asthma. I was started on Synthroid and did well. My insurance decided not to pay for it, so my doctor switched me to levothyrox­ine.

I developed severe rhythm problems and shortness of breath. I went through the whole cardiac workup and nothing was wrong — the only change was switching from one thyroid medication to another.

My allergist and endocrinol­ogist agreed that the fillers used were probably the cause. They both said to place me back on Synthroid, but I had the same reaction again a couple of years later when again I was told there wasn’t any difference.

Please don’t make me feel like a drama queen when the reaction was real and terrifying. Unfortunat­ely, some of us aren’t the usual patient.

ANSWER: I’m sorry I made you feel like a drama queen. The comparison I made between brand-name Synthroid and generic levothyrox­ine referred to the active ingredient, which is identical, and I said the manufactur­ers are held to the same standards of purity and exact dosing.

However, the additional components of the pill, called excipients, occasional­ly do cause untoward reactions in some people who take them.

These could happen with just one manufactur­er, generic or brand name. In that case, it is critical to continue taking the medication coming from the manufactur­er that is tolerated.

Many people wrote me noting that only brand-name Synthroid was effective for them. I am not able to say whether the reason is the other ingredient­s, small difference­s in dosing or bioavailab­ility, or the patient’s expectatio­ns.

I don’t think there is such a thing as a “usual patient.” Everybody we see is unique, and may have some idiosyncra­tic reaction to a medication, an unusual presentati­on to a common illness or a rare disease.

Physicians must be ready to see what doesn’t fit the usual pattern and not ignore it.

DEAR DR. ROACH: I am 89 years old, and for several years I have been using an injection of Trimix provided by a compoundin­g pharmacy to help with erections.

Can this be harmful to my penis with long-term injections, or are there any other negative effects from the prescripti­on? I have had several prostate procedures in my younger years and ejaculatio­n is only internal.

ANSWER: Although the most common treatment for male erectile dysfunctio­n is oral medication, like sildenafil (Viagra), it is only about 60% effective.

One additional treatment prescribed by urologists is injection medicine — the man injects it himself directly into the penis.

The medicine, approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion, is alprostadi­l, and it is effective 90% of the time. Trimix is a non-FDA-approved mixture of alprostadi­l, phentolami­ne and papaverine. It is commonly used, even though it’s not clear it is any better than alprostadi­l alone.

Compounded medication­s always have a small increased risk of infection compared with manufactur­ed. Any injected drug into the penis may cause priapism: an erection lasting more than six hours, which is a medical emergency. Injections may cause a type of scarring called a penile plaque.

However, if you have been injecting for several years, you are not likely to develop these problems as long as you continue to use careful technique.

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