Description
Omnacortil 2.5mg Tablet (Prednisolone) — Complete Clinical and Patient Guide
Product Overview
Omnacortil 2.5mg Tablet (Prednisolone) contains Prednisolone 2.5mg as its active pharmaceutical ingredient, belonging to the synthetic glucocorticoid corticosteroid — 4× potency of hydrocortisone. It is clinically indicated for asthma exacerbations, allergic conditions, autoimmune diseases (rheumatoid arthritis, SLE, vasculitis), inflammatory bowel disease, nephrotic syndrome, haematological conditions, and short-course anti-inflammatory therapy for severe allergic reactions. This guide has been prepared in accordance with YMYL (Your Money Your Life) content standards, drawing on regulatory prescribing information, peer-reviewed pharmacological literature, and established clinical guidelines.
Omnacortil 2.5mg contains Prednisolone 2.5mg, providing systemic glucocorticoid therapy for inflammatory, autoimmune, and allergic conditions. Systemic corticosteroids remain among the most potent and widely used anti-inflammatory agents in medicine — but their significant adverse effect profile with prolonged use requires that therapy be prescribed at the lowest effective dose for the shortest necessary duration under close medical supervision. very low dose for maintenance therapy or paediatric use
About Omnacortil 2.5mg and Its Active Ingredient
Prednisolone 2.5mg represents a well-established pharmaceutical entity with a clinical evidence base spanning decades of research and real-world use. The synthetic glucocorticoid corticosteroid — 4× potency of hydrocortisone to which it belongs has transformed the management of allergic, inflammatory, and other conditions, providing patients with effective symptom control, improved quality of life, and, in the case of systemic diseases, prevention of disease progression and organ damage.
Before initiating therapy with Omnacortil 2.5mg, patients should discuss their complete medical history, all current medications, allergies, and relevant lifestyle factors with their prescribing physician or pharmacist. Medical supervision is essential for prescription medications — self-diagnosis and self-treatment carries meaningful health risks including delayed diagnosis of serious conditions and preventable drug interactions.
Mechanism of Action
Prednisolone is a synthetic glucocorticoid with potent anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive activity, approximately 4 times more potent than hydrocortisone on a milligram basis. It binds to intracellular glucocorticoid receptors (GR) in the cytoplasm of virtually all nucleated cells. Upon ligand binding, the GR complex translocates to the nucleus where it modulates transcription of hundreds of genes: upregulating anti-inflammatory genes (annexin-1/lipocortin, IκB — the natural NF-κB inhibitor, MAPK phosphatase) and downregulating pro-inflammatory genes (cytokines IL-1, IL-2, IL-6, TNF-alpha; adhesion molecules ICAM-1, VCAM-1; prostaglandin-synthesising enzymes COX-2 and PLA2; and numerous chemokines). The cumulative effect is broad suppression of the inflammatory cascade: reduced cytokine production, decreased inflammatory cell recruitment and activation, reduced vascular permeability, and suppression of the adaptive immune response. These mechanisms underlie prednisolone’s clinical utility across inflammatory and autoimmune conditions.
Clinical Indications
Omnacortil 2.5mg Tablet (Prednisolone) is indicated for:
- Primary indication: asthma exacerbations, allergic conditions, autoimmune diseases (rheumatoid arthritis, SLE, vasculitis), inflammatory bowel disease, nephrotic syndrome, haematological conditions, and short-course anti-inflammatory therapy for severe allergic reactions
- Confirmed diagnosis required: A qualified healthcare professional must confirm the diagnosis before initiating treatment.
Dosage and Administration
Dosing is highly individualised based on condition, severity, and patient weight. 2.5mg prednisolone is used as prescribed. For acute severe asthma: 40–60mg/day for 5–10 days (adults), then review. For other inflammatory conditions: dose based on clinical assessment. Take with food to reduce gastric irritation. For courses >3 weeks: taper gradually rather than stopping abruptly.
Who Should Use Omnacortil 2.5mg
Omnacortil 2.5mg is appropriate for patients who have been diagnosed by a qualified healthcare professional with the conditions listed above and in whom this medication has been determined appropriate following benefit-risk assessment. Patients should have no contraindications and be able to comply with monitoring requirements where applicable.
Contraindications
Active untreated infections (systemic fungal infections — absolute contraindication; other infections require careful risk-benefit assessment). Hypersensitivity to the specific corticosteroid. Live vaccines during significant immunosuppression. Systemic fungal infections. Significant psychiatric illness (may worsen). Uncontrolled diabetes or hypertension (relative — manage concurrently). Peptic ulcer disease (concurrent PPI cover recommended).
Drug Interactions
NSAIDs: additive GI toxicity with systemic corticosteroids — use with PPI cover. Anticoagulants (warfarin): systemic corticosteroids may alter warfarin effect — monitor INR. Antidiabetic medications: corticosteroids cause hyperglycaemia — dose adjustment of antidiabetic agents may be required. CYP3A4 inhibitors (ketoconazole, ritonavir, clarithromycin): increase systemic corticosteroid plasma levels — may cause adrenal suppression even at standard doses. Rifampicin, phenytoin, carbamazepine (CYP3A4 inducers): reduce corticosteroid efficacy. Live vaccines: contraindicated during significant immunosuppression. Diuretics: additive hypokalaemia with corticosteroids and thiazide/loop diuretics.
A complete medication review by a qualified pharmacist or physician is essential before starting Omnacortil 2.5mg. Many drug interactions can be managed proactively through timing adjustments, dose modifications, or alternative drug selection — but only when identified before dispensing.
Adverse Effects
Short-term use (days to weeks): Hyperglycaemia (particularly in diabetics — monitor blood glucose), fluid retention and weight gain, mood changes (euphoria, anxiety, insomnia or psychosis at higher doses), increased appetite, and gastric irritation (take with food).
Longer-term use (weeks to months): HPA axis suppression (do not stop abruptly — taper dose under medical guidance), Cushing’s syndrome features (central obesity, moon face, buffalo hump), hypertension, dyslipidaemia, skin thinning and bruising, and osteoporosis (use calcium/vitamin D supplementation; consider bisphosphonate in long-term users).
Immunosuppression: Increased susceptibility to infections — bacterial, viral, fungal, and opportunistic. Screen for latent tuberculosis before long-term therapy. Live vaccines are contraindicated during significant corticosteroid immunosuppression.
Metabolic: Hyperglycaemia, adrenal suppression, growth retardation in children with prolonged use, cataracts, glaucoma, avascular necrosis of femoral head (long-term high-dose use).
Special Population Considerations
Tapering: Never stop prednisolone abruptly after more than 2–3 weeks of therapy. Gradual dose reduction prevents adrenal insufficiency (the adrenal glands suppress cortisol production during exogenous steroid treatment — abrupt cessation leaves insufficient endogenous cortisol). Your physician will prescribe a specific tapering schedule. Stress dosing: Patients on long-term prednisolone may require increased doses (‘stress dosing’) during illness, surgery, or trauma. Carry a steroid warning card. Calcium and vitamin D: Supplement during prolonged courses to reduce osteoporosis risk. very low dose for maintenance therapy or paediatric use
Storage
Store Omnacortil 2.5mg at room temperature (15–25°C), away from direct sunlight, heat, and moisture. Keep in original packaging out of reach of children. Do not use beyond the printed expiry date. Dispose of unused medication through authorised pharmaceutical take-back programmes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How should I store this medication?
A: Store at room temperature (15–25°C), away from direct sunlight, heat, and moisture. Keep in original packaging out of reach of children and pets. Do not use beyond the printed expiry date.
Q: What if I miss a dose?
A: Take the missed dose as soon as you remember, unless it is nearly time for the next scheduled dose. Do not double-dose. For as-needed allergy medications, a missed dose is simply not taken — resume regular scheduled dosing.
Q: Why do I need to take prednisolone with food?
A: Prednisolone can irritate the gastric mucosa, increasing risk of peptic ulcer disease. Taking it with food, milk, or a glass of water reduces gastric irritation. A proton pump inhibitor (PPI) is often co-prescribed with short-term higher-dose prednisolone courses for additional gastroprotection.
Q: What is the steroid emergency card and why do I need one?
A: Patients on regular prednisolone have suppressed adrenal glands that cannot produce adequate cortisol in response to stress. A steroid emergency card warns medical personnel that the patient requires supplemental (‘stress’) corticosteroids during emergencies, surgery, or severe illness to prevent potentially life-threatening adrenal crisis.
Evidence Base and Quality Standards
The active ingredient in Omnacortil 2.5mg has been evaluated across multiple randomised controlled trials, systematic reviews, and real-world clinical studies. Its use is supported by evidence-based guidelines from major international organisations including the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology, American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, British Association of Dermatologists, Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA), and WHO Essential Medicines List (for applicable agents).
Omnacortil 2.5mg is manufactured in compliance with Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) standards, ensuring consistent product quality, identity, strength, purity, and safety. Patients should obtain prescription medications only through licensed pharmacies with a valid prescription to ensure receipt of authentic, properly stored, quality-assured products.
Patient Counselling Points
- Adherence: Consistent daily use of preventive medications (antihistamines for urticaria, montelukast for asthma, intranasal corticosteroids for rhinitis) produces significantly better outcomes than as-needed or irregular use.
- Onset of action: Intranasal corticosteroids require 1–2 weeks of consistent use before full anti-inflammatory benefit is apparent. Antihistamines provide faster symptom relief. Montelukast’s benefit for asthma and rhinitis accumulates with regular daily dosing.
- Sun protection: Systemic corticosteroids increase photosensitivity. Many topical corticosteroids increase skin fragility — protect treated areas from sun and friction.
- Avoid abrupt cessation: Long-term oral corticosteroids must never be stopped abruptly — gradual tapering prevents adrenal crisis. Short courses (less than 2 weeks) can generally be stopped without tapering.
Clinical Evidence and Guidelines
The active pharmaceutical ingredient(s) in this product have been evaluated in extensive randomised controlled trials, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses published in peer-reviewed medical literature. The clinical evidence base for this drug class supports its use in the indicated conditions and is reflected in treatment recommendations from major international specialist organisations including the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology (BSACI), European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI), American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (AAAAI), British Association of Dermatologists (BAD), Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA), Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma (ARIA) guidelines, and the World Health Organization (WHO).
Evidence-based prescribing in allergy, asthma, and dermatology requires individualised therapy selection — matching the appropriate drug class, formulation, potency, and delivery vehicle to the specific patient’s condition severity, comorbidities, preferences, and lifestyle. The information in this guide is intended to support informed clinical decision-making and patient understanding, not to replace the professional judgement of a qualified healthcare provider.
Allergic Disease: Background and Management Context
Allergic diseases — including allergic rhinitis, asthma, urticaria, atopic dermatitis, and allergic conjunctivitis — affect over 30% of the global population, representing the most common non-communicable disease group worldwide. The prevalence of allergic conditions continues to rise in industrialised nations, driven by environmental changes, urbanisation, dietary shifts, and altered immune programming (the hygiene hypothesis).
Allergic rhinitis alone affects 400 million people globally and is associated with significant quality-of-life impairment: impaired sleep, reduced productivity, academic performance deficits, and increased rates of anxiety and depression. Allergic rhinitis and asthma are frequently comorbid (‘united airway disease’) — approximately 80% of patients with asthma have allergic rhinitis, and uncontrolled rhinitis worsens asthma control. Effective management of allergic rhinitis, therefore, has implications for both nasal and bronchial disease control.
Pharmacological therapy is one pillar of allergy management, complemented by allergen avoidance measures (HEPA filtration, dust mite reduction, pet dander management, pollen exposure reduction) and, where appropriate, allergen immunotherapy (subcutaneous or sublingual). Healthcare providers help patients develop comprehensive personalised management plans that integrate all three approaches for optimal disease control.
Patient Counselling and Adherence
Adherence to prescribed pharmacotherapy is the most important determinant of treatment outcome for chronic allergic and inflammatory conditions. Key adherence principles include:
- Consistent daily use for preventive medications: Antihistamines, montelukast, and intranasal corticosteroids work best when taken daily — not just on symptomatic days. Pre-seasonal initiation of intranasal corticosteroids (2 weeks before allergy season) maximises anti-inflammatory protection before peak allergen exposure.
- Realistic outcome expectations: Intranasal corticosteroids require 1–2 weeks of consistent daily use before maximum anti-inflammatory benefit is achieved. Antihistamines provide faster relief but do not address the underlying nasal mucosal inflammation.
- Combination approaches: Combination H1 antihistamine + LTRA (levocetirizine + montelukast) provides complementary dual-mechanism benefit for patients with moderate-to-severe allergic rhinitis or with both rhinitis and asthma.
- Side-effect management: Prompt identification and management of predictable side effects (e.g., post-injection pain with intra-articular steroids, epistaxis with nasal sprays, oropharyngeal candidiasis with inhaled steroids) prevents unnecessary discontinuation of effective therapy.
Quality and Manufacturing Standards
This product is manufactured in compliance with Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) standards required by national and international pharmaceutical regulatory authorities, including the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) in India, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the UK, and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). GMP certification ensures that every batch of the product meets defined standards for identity, strength, purity, and sterility (where applicable), providing patients with confidence in product quality and consistency.
Patients should always obtain prescription medications from licensed pharmacies or authorised dispensing channels. Purchasing medications from unlicensed online sources carries significant risks including counterfeit, substandard, or contaminated products that may be ineffective at best and dangerous at worst.
Important Medical Disclaimer
This product information guide is provided for general educational purposes, developed in accordance with YMYL (Your Money Your Life) content standards. All information draws on regulatory prescribing information, peer-reviewed pharmacological literature, and established clinical guidelines. It does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a qualified physician, allergist, pulmonologist, dermatologist, or pharmacist. Drug therapy decisions must be individualised by a licensed healthcare provider with full knowledge of the patient’s medical history, comorbidities, and concurrent medications. Self-diagnosis and self-treatment with prescription medications can be dangerous — always consult a healthcare professional.

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