Inhaler in a sentence as a noun

They did tell me to keep a rescue inhaler just in case, and I have one around here somewhere.

The felling of rainforest, the Earth's inhaler of carbon dioxide.

There's been a nicotine inhaler available in the states since 1998.

Not only did I not need a prescription, but I also only paid $4 for the inhaler, complete with medicine.

As an anecdotal example, when visiting Beijing, I had some trouble breathing, so I went to a pharmacy to buy an inhaler.

I have asthma and a coworker's perfume set off an attack yesterday that could have ended me up in the hospital despite having an inhaler.

Thank you for posting this, I am also asthmatic and would like a better preventative measure instead of depending on having a dose left in my inhaler.

So presumably you don't take antibiotics, insulin, an inhaler, use any reproductive **** etc... for the same logic?

At some point a few years ago, I realized I didn't need to use my inhaler before running anymore- my lung capacity increased to overcome the inefficiency.

The pharmaceutical industry decided to lobby against the exception so they could reformulate the inhaler and introduce a new patent - and make billions on a 30+ year old drug.

And because "just try it" can do real harm?My anecdote for you: both of those are in the prenatal vitamins I take and have been taking for a while.... along with singulair, dulera, and my rescue inhaler.

I found opinions that the best decongestant for sinuses - and inhaler - is Benzedrex, not available in UK. Benzedrex contains propylhexedrine 'which has similar structures and properties as pseudoephedrine'.

What about a pill/lotion/inhaler/whatever that contains a variety of carefully selected and relatively harmless germs to give your immune system plenty of practice without risk of any life-threatening infection?

The vast majority of people who are ordering from online pharmacies are doing so because they think they know what they're doing, and because they feel X or Y, they should take Z. This isn't really a problem with inhalers per se, because the amount of them you are required to ingest is actually pretty damn high before you are in any danger, but for stuff like prescription painkillers, people are self medicating and avoiding doctors visits for issues that they should be seeing a professional for.

Inhaler definitions

noun

a dispenser that produces a chemical vapor to be inhaled in order to relieve nasal congestion

See also: inhalator