The FDA has approved a new flu vaccine nasal spray for at-home use. While this self-administered version won't be available for this year's flu season, interest in nasal spray products is growing.
A potential new defense may have appeared in the form of a commercially available nasal spray built from a collection of readily available and inactive chemical ingredients. According to results ...
Representative image of the human nasal cavity. Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital have developed a nasal spray that could provide broad-spectrum protection against various respiratory ...
The spray traps viruses and bacteria in the nose before they can infect a person The spray worked in lab and mouse tests, but hasn’t yet been tested on humans WEDNESDAY, Sept. 25, 2024 (HealthDay News ...
The makers of a nasal spray launched last year by start-up Akita Biosciences have pulled back the curtain on how their product works (Adv. Mater. 2024, DOI: 10.1002/adma.202406348). The company ...
That's where a special nasal spray may come in, as it's been shown to prevent such illnesses (in mice) without the use of drugs. Respiratory viruses typically enter our body within droplets that ...
If this flu-busting nasal spray lives up to its promise, it will be a blockbuster. Scientists at Harvard Medical School have ...
The Food and Drug Administration on Friday approved the first at-home flu vaccine, a nasal spray that consumers with a prescription will be able to order online starting next year. Health experts ...
The nasal spray flu vaccine platform for at-home use will be available sometime next Fall, an AstraZeneca spokesperson told ABC News. The FDA Friday approved the flu vaccine that can be done at ...
The Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers not to use SnoreStop Nasal Spray, because it might have microbial contamination. The spray was distributed by Green Pharmaceuticals Inc., ...
New research published in Advanced Materials reports a novel nasal spray for preventing respiratory infections. The spray works by forming a protective coating on the nasal cavity, which captures ...
Pathogens inhaled along with respiratory droplets enter through the nasal lining, causing respiratory infections. Brigham researchers have developed a pathogen capture and neutralizing spray (PCANS), ...