NyQuil

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File:NyQuill boxart.jpg
NyQuil LiquiCaps. #2 pencil placed for size comparison.

NyQuil is a brand of over the counter medication which is intended to relieve various symptoms of the common cold. Because all of the medications within the NyQuil imprint contain sedating antihistamines and/or hypnotics and alcohol, they are typically taken at night, just before bedtime. Its daytime counterpart is DayQuil, which does not contain sedating antihistamines and is intended not to induce drowsiness. Both NyQuil and DayQuil are manufactured by Procter & Gamble.

NyQuil is formulated as either liquid or capsules (LiquiCaps). The liquid form was test marketed in 1966 and finally widely introduced in the fall of 1968 (with numerous magazine ads and television commercials), and the capsules were introduced in the late 1980s. The product's slogans have traditionally described the product as "The nighttime, sniffling, sneezing...(three or four more symptoms, plus a verb description, such as 'so you can rest')...medicine" where the list is slightly tailored to the particular formulation being offered.

The product is referred to in the German band's EC8OR song “Gimme Nyquil All Night Long”. There are many theories as to where the name NyQuil originated from, but it is believed that it is derived from the term "Nighttime Tranquility".[citation needed]

Products

NyQuil Cold/Flu Multisymptom Relief

NyQuil Cold/Flu Multisymptom Relief is available in syrup and LiquiCap form.

The liquid version of NyQuil Cold/Flu Multi-symptom Relief currently contains the following active ingredients (15 mL is one tablespoon, which is half the recommended adult dose):

The capsule (Liquicap) version has less Acetaminophen per dose. The following is the active ingredients for one pill, which is half the recommended adult dose:

NyQuil D

NyQuil D is available in syrup form only. It contains pseudoephedrine, a decongestant, and is available behind the pharmacy counter.

NyQuil D contains the following active ingredients (15 mL is one tablespoon, which is half the recommended adult dose):

NyQuil Cough

Nyquil Cough's active ingredients are:

This is the most commonly recreationally used variant of NyQuil due to its lack of acetaminophen[citation needed] which has been known to cause liver damage in high doses.

NyQuil Sinus

Nyquil Sinus' active ingredients are:

Nyquil Sinus is available as LiquiCaps only.

Reformulation

Previously, NyQuil Cold/Flu Multisymptom Relief and NyQuil Sinus contained pseudoephedrine (30 mg/15 mL), another nasal decongestant that also formed the active ingredient in Sudafed. Following the passage of the Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act in 2006, in the United States all pseudoephedrine-containing medications must be kept behind a pharmacy counter and all purchases must be logged.

Vicks chose to keep its products more easily accessible by reformulating NyQuil Sinus, replacing pseudoephedrine with phenylephrine. Many people were outraged by this change and chose to boycott the product, because studies have shown that phenylephrine is no more effective than a placebo. Due to the protest, Vicks chose to revert to the original formula which became NyQuil D.[1]

NyQuil no longer contains phenylephrine except for the sinus LiquiCaps variety.[2]

NyQuil Children's

NyQuil Children's active ingredients are:

NyQuil Children's is unique among the NyQuil line in that it contains no alcohol.[citation needed] It is available in the syrup form only.

References

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External links

sv:Nyquil
  1. UF press release on the Hendles letter
  2. Vicks NyQuil