Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Flu treatment, at times ", 7 letters:
inhaler

Alternative clues for the word inhaler

Word definitions for inhaler in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 One who inhales. 2 (context medicine English) A device with a canister holding medicine (either in powder or gas form) which is sprayed and inhaled by the patient, often for treating asthma and other respiratory diseases.

Usage examples of inhaler.

Iodine inhalations, administered with the pocket inhaler, illustrated by Fig.

Selecting a long-stemmed goblet of greenish wine and a stylish little Perkup nasal inhaler, Alacrity sighed.

Zander plucked a pair of inhalers from a basket, handed one to Nyk, put the other to his lips and inhaled.

The only reminders she had were the daily dose of the inhaler and the two radiographs she had framed and mounted on her wall.

Heaved a considerable sigh of relief, once the lid was open, to see the pills and inhalers and syringe and adrenalin ampoules all more or less in the positions Emma had given them.

He was revived with the vapors of ammonium chloride from a cut-glass inhaler.

If not by the pool, he might dine dangerously with fine china and antique silverware at a table in the rose garden, keeping his inhaler ready on a dessert plate in the event that a breeze stirred up enough pollen to trigger an asthma attack.

She handed him a fizzy orange drink in a thing like a brandy inhaler with a hollow stem.

He also pocketed two inhalers of tranquilizer, which he knew he would require before the day was out.

In less than ten minutes he was able to reach his inhalers, and he was only three minutes late joining the party.

Voices were raised to a certain histrionic pitch, people handled their inhalers and drinks with a slightly more studied elegance, and every smile turned my way was bright enough for a team of security experts.

I do know there were times when a workout made her wheezy and kind of short of breath, but she had one of those inhalers and it seemed to help.

The recreational gases in the wall dispenser were mostly nitrous oxide, in individual inhalers containing about two or three cubic meters of gas.

Although my mother subjected me to daily torture by Vick's Inhaler and steaming bowls of Vick's ointment dissolved in water, which, blanket over head, I was obliged to try and inhale, my sinuses refused to respond to treatment.