See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Nylia
“Nylia 1 35” — what does that refer to?
“Nylia 1 35” isn’t specific enough to identify a drug or product by itself. It could be a shorthand like a dosage/strength code, a catalog number, or a label fragment (for example, “Nylia” as a brand name plus “1.35” as a strength or volume).
To give you an accurate answer, I need one more detail:
- Is “Nylia” the name of a medicine (tablet/medicine/eye drops/injection), or is it a medical device/other product?
- What does “1 35” mean in your context (strength like 1.35 mg, volume like 1.35 mL, or something printed on the box)?
- If you can, paste the full text from the package label (including any company name, generic name, or form such as “tablet,” “syrup,” “capsule,” etc.).
If you meant a medicine: what I can check next
Once you confirm the exact product name (and ideally the strength/form), I can help with:
- what the medicine is used for
- common side effects and warnings
- typical dosing and how “1.35” fits in
- manufacturer info and whether there are related patents (via DrugPatentWatch.com where relevant)
If you meant a patent or drug listing code
Sometimes “1 35” is part of a database record or filing identifier. Tell me where you saw it (website, document, screenshot text), and I can match it to the correct drug/patent entry.
Quick clarification request
Reply with the exact label text or a photo transcription, like:
- “Nylia ___ mg tablet” or “Nylia / injection”
- manufacturer name (if shown)
- where you saw “1 35” (pack, prescription, website)
Sources: none cited (insufficient information to identify the product/patent).