Tuesday, June 30, 2026

"Hidden Steroids, High Prices, and Consumer Trust: A Comparative Case-Cum-Research Study of Pain Killer Sprays, Pain Relief Creams, Japanese Topical Analgesics, and Hara Malham in India"

"Hidden Steroids, High Prices, and Consumer Trust: A Comparative Case-Cum-Research Study of Pain Killer Sprays, Pain Relief Creams, Japanese Topical Analgesics, and Hara Malham in India"



Abstract

Topical analgesics have become one of the most commonly used self-medication products for musculoskeletal pain, sports injuries, arthritis, backache, and joint discomfort. These products include pain-relief sprays, creams, gels, imported Japanese formulations, and traditional products such as Hara Malham. While topical therapies are generally considered safer than oral analgesics, concerns have emerged regarding adverse skin reactions, excessive pricing, misleading marketing claims, and the presence of undeclared pharmaceutical ingredients in certain herbal or traditional products. This case-cum-research study evaluates the comparative safety, pricing structure, ingredient transparency, and adulteration risks associated with these products in the Indian market. A proposed laboratory testing protocol using High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) and Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) is presented to identify hidden steroids, NSAIDs, antibiotics, and synthetic analgesics. The study concludes that stronger regulatory surveillance, transparent labeling practices, and consumer awareness are necessary to protect public health.

Keywords: Topical analgesics, Pain relief sprays, Japanese pain creams, Hara Malham, Adulteration, Steroid contamination, Consumer safety, Pharmaceutical regulation, Counterfeit medicines.

 

1. Introduction

Pain management represents a significant component of healthcare expenditure worldwide. In India, topical pain-relief products are frequently used because they provide localized treatment and are often available without prescription.

The market comprises:

  • Commercial pain-relief sprays
  • Pain-relief creams and gels
  • Imported Japanese topical analgesics
  • Traditional herbal preparations such as Hara Malham

Consumers often perceive imported and herbal products as safer alternatives. However, reports from drug regulators and consumer protection agencies indicate that some products may contain undeclared pharmaceuticals, excessive concentrations of active ingredients, or misleading marketing claims.

This study investigates these concerns through a comparative analysis of efficacy mechanisms, adverse effects, pricing patterns, and adulteration risks.

 

2. Objectives of the Study

The study aims to:

  1. Compare the active ingredients used in topical analgesics.
  2. Examine common side effects associated with different product categories.
  3. Analyze pricing differences among products.
  4. Assess risks associated with counterfeit and adulterated formulations.
  5. Develop a laboratory testing protocol for product verification.
  6. Provide recommendations for regulators, healthcare professionals, and consumers.

 

3. Research Methodology

Research Design

The study follows a descriptive and exploratory case-cum-research approach.

Data Sources

Primary Sources

  • Market observations
  • Product label examination
  • Retail price comparisons

Secondary Sources

  • Scientific literature
  • Drug regulatory advisories
  • Consumer protection reports
  • Pharmacology textbooks
  • Public health reports

Proposed Laboratory Analysis

The following analytical techniques are proposed:

Test Method

Purpose

HPLC

Detection of NSAIDs and steroids

GC-MS

Detection of volatile compounds and adulterants

FTIR Spectroscopy

Identification of chemical signatures

Microbial Testing

Detection of contamination

Heavy Metal Analysis

Lead, mercury, arsenic screening

 

4. Classification of Topical Analgesics

A. Pain Relief Sprays

Common ingredients:

  • Menthol
  • Camphor
  • Diclofenac
  • Methyl salicylate

Mechanism

Rapid evaporation produces cooling sensations and temporary pain relief.

 

B. Pain Relief Creams

Common ingredients:

  • Diclofenac
  • Capsaicin
  • Ibuprofen
  • Menthol

Mechanism

Longer skin contact allows sustained penetration.

 

C. Japanese Pain Relief Creams

Common ingredients:

  • Menthol
  • Methyl salicylate
  • Indomethacin
  • Felbinac

Market Position

Premium-priced products with strong consumer trust.

 

D. Hara Malham

Common ingredients (vary by producer):

  • Camphor
  • Herbal oils
  • Menthol
  • Plant extracts

Concern

Lack of formulation standardization.

 

5. Comparative Ingredient Analysis

Table 1: Typical Ingredient Comparison

Ingredient

Spray

Cream

Japanese Cream

Hara Malham

Menthol

High

Moderate

High

Moderate

Camphor

High

Moderate

Moderate

High

NSAIDs

Sometimes

Common

Common

Rare

Herbal Oils

Rare

Rare

Rare

Common

Capsaicin

Rare

Common

Rare

Rare

Steroid Risk

Low-Medium

Medium

Low

Medium-High

 

6. Side Effects Analysis

Common Side Effects

Skin Reactions

  • Redness
  • Burning
  • Itching
  • Rash

Allergic Reactions

  • Contact dermatitis
  • Swelling
  • Sensitivity reactions

Systemic Effects

Possible when hidden ingredients are absorbed through skin.

 

Table 2: Side Effect Risk Assessment

Side Effect

Spray

Cream

Japanese Cream

Hara Malham

Skin Irritation

Moderate

Moderate

Low

Moderate

Allergic Reaction

Low

Moderate

Low

Moderate

Photosensitivity

Low

Moderate

Moderate

Low

Drug Interaction

Low

Moderate

Moderate

Unknown

Steroid Exposure Risk

Low

Low

Low

High*

*Potential where adulteration occurs.

 

7. Case Analysis: The Problem of Hidden Ingredients

Several international regulatory investigations have identified traditional and herbal products containing undeclared:

  • Dexamethasone
  • Prednisolone
  • Diclofenac
  • Ibuprofen
  • Antibiotics

Manufacturers may add these compounds to create rapid symptom relief.

Consumers often interpret immediate effectiveness as proof of product quality.

However, the apparent effectiveness may result from hidden pharmaceuticals.

 

8. Economic Analysis

Pricing Concerns

Premium branding often creates large price differences despite similar active ingredients.

Table 3: Illustrative Market Pricing

Product Category

Approximate Price Range (₹)

Pain Relief Spray

120–350

Pain Relief Cream

80–300

Japanese Cream

500–2,000

Hara Malham

50–400

Observation

Japanese products may cost 5–10 times more than domestic alternatives containing comparable ingredients.

 

9. Statistical Risk Matrix

Table 4: Comparative Risk Score

(1 = Very Low, 5 = Very High)

Parameter

Spray

Cream

Japanese Cream

Hara Malham

Price Risk

2

2

5

2

Counterfeit Risk

3

3

4

4

Adulteration Risk

2

3

2

5

Label Transparency

4

4

4

2

Regulatory Oversight

4

4

4

2

 

10. Proposed Laboratory Testing Plan

Sample Collection

Products

  • Top 10 sprays
  • Top 10 creams
  • Top 5 Japanese imports
  • Top 10 Hara Malham samples

Sources

  • Retail pharmacies
  • Online marketplaces
  • Traditional medicine stores
  • Street vendors

Sample Size

Category

Samples

Sprays

30

Creams

30

Japanese Creams

15

Hara Malham

30

Total

105

 

Chemical Screening Protocol

Phase I

Visual inspection

  • Batch numbers
  • Manufacturing details
  • Packaging inconsistencies

Phase II

Chemical testing

Detection of:

  • Dexamethasone
  • Prednisolone
  • Diclofenac
  • Ibuprofen
  • Ketoprofen
  • Antibiotics

Phase III

Heavy metal screening

Detection of:

  • Lead
  • Mercury
  • Arsenic
  • Cadmium

 

11. Case Findings

The analysis indicates that:

  1. Commercial sprays provide fast but temporary relief.
  2. Creams offer prolonged action.
  3. Japanese creams command premium prices despite similar active ingredients.
  4. Traditional products exhibit greater variability in formulation.
  5. Adulteration risk is highest where manufacturing transparency is weakest.
  6. Consumers often equate rapid relief with superior quality, creating incentives for illegal ingredient addition.

 

12. Recommendations

For Regulators

  1. Conduct random batch testing.
  2. Increase surveillance of imported products.
  3. Strengthen online marketplace monitoring.
  4. Impose penalties for undeclared pharmaceuticals.

For Healthcare Professionals

  1. Ask patients about topical medicine usage.
  2. Investigate unexplained steroid-like symptoms.
  3. Educate patients regarding counterfeit products.

For Consumers

  1. Purchase only from licensed pharmacies.
  2. Avoid miracle cure claims.
  3. Read ingredient labels carefully.
  4. Patch-test before use.
  5. Stop use immediately if severe irritation occurs.

 

13. Limitations

This study relies primarily on literature reviews, market observations, and regulatory reports. No independent chemical testing of specific Indian-market batches was conducted.

Pricing data may vary across geographic regions, retail channels, and time periods. Definitive evidence regarding adulteration requires laboratory verification.

 

14. Future Research Directions

Future investigations should include:

  • HPLC analysis of high-selling products.
  • GC-MS screening for hidden pharmaceuticals.
  • Longitudinal consumer safety studies.
  • National adverse-event reporting databases.
  • Comparative pharmacoeconomic studies of branded versus generic topical analgesics.

 

15. Conclusion

Topical analgesics remain an important component of pain management because of their localized action and relatively favorable safety profile. Nevertheless, concerns regarding misleading marketing, excessive pricing, counterfeit products, and hidden pharmaceutical ingredients warrant increased attention. Imported Japanese creams and traditional products such as Hara Malham may offer consumer appeal, but safety should not be assumed solely on the basis of reputation or herbal claims. Effective regulatory oversight, laboratory surveillance, transparent labeling, and informed consumer behavior are essential to ensure that topical pain-relief products remain both safe and effective in the Indian healthcare market.

 

References (APA 7th Edition)

·         World Health Organization. (2024). Substandard and falsified medical products.

·         Central Drugs Standard Control Organization. (2024). Drug safety alerts and regulatory guidance.

·         United States Food and Drug Administration. (2024). Consumer updates on topical pain relievers.

·         National Institutes of Health. (2024). Topical analgesics and pain management.

·         European Medicines Agency. (2024). Pharmacovigilance reports on topical medicines.

·         International Pharmaceutical Federation. (2023). Medicine quality assurance guidelines.
APPENDIX

Table A1

Indian Pain Relief Sprays

S. No.

Brand

Product Type

Approximate Pack Size

Approximate Market Price (₹)

1

Moov Spray

Pain Relief Spray

80 g

180–230

2

Volini Spray

Pain Relief Spray

100 g

220–320

3

Iodex Rapid Action Spray

Pain Relief Spray

100 g

190–280

4

Dr. Ortho Spray

Pain Relief Spray

120 ml

220–350

5

Zandu Fast Relief Spray

Pain Relief Spray

100 ml

180–260

Table A2

Indian Pain Relief Creams and Gels

S. No.

Brand

Product Type

Approximate Pack Size

Approximate Market Price (₹)

1

Moov Cream

Cream

50 g

130–190

2

Volini Gel

Gel

50 g

150–240

3

Iodex Balm

Balm

40 g

120–180

4

Omnigel

Gel

30 g

140–250

5

Dynapar Gel

Gel

30 g

140–220

6

Relaxyl Gel

Gel

30 g

120–210

7

Rumalaya Forte Gel

Herbal Gel

30 g

110–190

Table A3

Japanese Topical Analgesics Commonly Available Through Importers and E-Commerce Channels

S. No.

Brand

Country of Origin

Approximate Pack Size

Approximate Market Price (₹)

1

Salonpas Pain Relief Gel

Japan

60 g

650–1,100

2

Salonpas Deep Relief Cream

Japan

80 g

900–1,500

3

Hisamitsu Analgesic Cream

Japan

50–60 g

800–1,400

4

Roihi Tsuboko Pain Relief Cream

Japan

78 g

1,000–1,800

5

Kobayashi Ammeltz Cream

Japan

46–80 ml

900–1,700

6

Mentholatum Analgesic Cream

Japan

50 g

700–1,300

Table A4

Hara Malham and Traditional Balm Products

S. No.

Product Category

Approximate Pack Size

Approximate Market Price (₹)

 1

Hara Malham (Local Manufacturer)

20–25 g

40–120

2

Hara Malham (Regional Brand)

25–50 g

80–250

3

Herbal Pain Balm (Traditional)

25–50 g

70–300

4

Ayurvedic Pain Relief Balm

25–50 g

90–350

Table A5

Comparative Cost Index (Illustrative)

Category

Average Price Range (₹)

Relative Cost Index*

Indian Herbal Balm

40–150

1.0

Indian Pain Cream/Gel

120–250

1.8

Indian Pain Spray

180–320

2.2

Japanese Imported Cream

700–1,800

8.5

Premium Imported Analgesic

1,000–2,000

10.0

*Cost Index calculated relative to the average price of traditional Indian pain balms.

Key Observation

Japanese imported topical analgesics may cost approximately 5–10 times more than comparable Indian products despite often sharing common active ingredients such as menthol, methyl salicylate, camphor, or topical NSAIDs. The higher price may reflect import duties, logistics costs, branding, perceived quality, and consumer trust rather than proportionately higher therapeutic efficacy.

 


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"Hidden Steroids, High Prices, and Consumer Trust: A Comparative Case-Cum-Research Study of Pain Killer Sprays, Pain Relief Creams, Japanese Topical Analgesics, and Hara Malham in India"

"Hidden Steroids, High Prices, and Consumer Trust: A Comparative Case-Cum-Research Study of Pain Killer Sprays, Pain Relief Creams, Jap...