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HIV Antivirals

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

Generic Name
Glatiramer (glah-TYE-ram-er)
Brand Name  Copaxone
Type of Drug
Relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (MS) therapy.
Prescribed For  MS.
General Information
Glatiramer is a mixture of several amino acids. It is thought to work by modifying the immune processes responsible for MS. In studies, people who took the drug for over a year were twice as likely to be relapse-free as those who took a placebo (sugar pill).
Cautions and Warnings
Do not use this drug it you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients or to mannitol.
About 10% of people who self-administer glatiramer experience a post-injection reaction with symptoms that include flushing, chest pain, heart palpitations, anxiety, breathing difficulties, closing of the throat, and an itchy rash. These symptoms usually go away without treatment. This reaction generally occurs after several months of drug therapy, though it may occur earlier.
About 21 % of the people who took glatiramer in drug studies had chest pain, but the exact relationship of this pain to use of glatiramer could not be determined. Report any chest pain to your doctor at once.
Glatiramer may make you more sensitive to sunlight.
Because it interferes with immune response, glatiramer may increase your risk of developing infections and tumors.
Glatiramer may interfere with kidney function.
Possible Side Effects
V Most common: infections, weakness, pain, chest pain, flu-like symptoms, back pain, flushing, heart palpitations, anxiety, muscle stiffness or spasticity, an urgent need to urinate, swollen lymph glands, injection-site reactions
Possible Side Effects (continued)
(including pain, inflammation, itching, an unknown mass at the injection site, welts, skin marks, and bleeding), breathing difficulties, runny nose, and joint pain.
¦    Common: fever, neck pain, facial swelling, bacterial infection, migraine, rapid heartbeat, tremors, fainting, appetite loss, vomiting, general stomach disorders, vaginal infection, painful menstruation, black-and-blue marks, swelling in the arms or legs, bronchial irritation, spasm of the larynx, and ear pain.
V Less common: chills, cysts, agitation, foot drop, nervousness, rolling eyeballs, rapid eye movement, confusion, speech problems, cold sores, redness, itchy rash, skin nodules, stomach pain and irritation, and weight gain.
¦    Rare: Other side effects can occur in almost any part of the body, including the heart and blood vessels, digestive system, blood and lymph systems, muscles and bones, respiratory system, kidney, reproductive system, and eyes. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
Food and Drug Interactions None known.
Usual Dose
Adult (age 18 and over): 20 mg a day by injection under the skin. Child (under age 18): not recommended.
Overdosage
Little is known about the effects of glatiramer overdose. Call you local poison control center or a hospital emergency room for information. If you seek treatment, ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
This medication is given by injection. For information on how to properly administer this drug, see page 1242.
Store unused glatiramer in the refrigerator before it is mixed with the diluent supplied by the manufacturer. Do not use any other diluent. The mixed injection must be used right away.
Suggested injection sites are the arms, abdomen, hips. and thighs. Be sure to rotate injection sites.
Glatiramer works best if given at the same time each day.
If you forget to administer a dose, do so as soon as you remember. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the dose you forgot and continue with your regular schedule. Do not take a double dose. Call your doctor if you miss more than 2 doses in a row.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: The safety of using glatiramer during pregnancy is not known. When this drug is considered crucial by your doctor, its potential benefits must be carefully weighed against its risks.
It is not known if glatiramer passes into breast milk. Nursing mothers who must take it should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors may use glatiramer without special restriction.

Type of Drug
Glitazone Antidiabetes Drugs
(GLIT-uh-zone)
Brand Names
Rosiglitazone Maleate Avandia
Combination Products
Pioglitazone Hydrochloride + Metformin Hydrochloride
ACTOplus Met
Pioglitazone Hydrochloride + Glimepiride Duetact
Rosiglitazone Maleate + Metformin Hydrochloride
Nnndamet
Rosiglitazone Maleate + Glimepiride Avandaryl
Prescribed For  Type 2 diabetes.
General Information
The glitazones reduce the amount of sugar produced by the liver and increase insulin sensitivity of muscle, liver, and fat cells. They may also help to control blood-fat levels, which are often elevated in diabetes. Glitazones work by affecting genes responsible for controlling the use of sugar and fat in the body, making cells more sensitive to insulin. They are effective for people with type 2 diabetes, whose cells do not respond well to insulin. Glitazones only work when insulin is present. They do not increase the amount of insulin made in the pancreas. Glitazones can be used alone or combined with other diabetes drugs. Studies have indicated that taking rosiglitazone can delay or prevent type 2 diabetes in people with pre-diabetes.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take these drugs if you are sensitive or allergic to any of their ingredients or to related drugs. Glitazones may cause fluid retention, worsening or leading to heart failure. Some studies have indicated the risk of heart attack may be increased in people taking rosiglitazone. Other studies have shown that pioglitazone decreases the risk of heart attack. The effects of these drugs on the heart are still being investigated.
Glitazones are broken down in the liver; people with liver disease should not take them. Liver enzyme monitoring is recommended for all people taking a glitazone. People taking pioglitazone and rosiglitazone have experienced liver failure, though no direct causal effect of the drug has been established.
Glitazones may raise blood levels of cholesterol and other blood fats.
These drugs can trigger ovulation. Premenopausal women who are not ovulating may be at risk of becoming pregnant.
Glitazones can cause weight gain, which increases with dosage.
Rosiglitazone may increase the risk of broken bones in the hands, arms, or feet.
Women may achieve maximum benefit with smaller dosages.
Possible Side Effects
Pioglitazone
In studies, the side effects of pioglitazone were about the same as those for a placebo (sugar pill).
Possible Side Effects (continued)
¦    Most common: upper respiratory infections, headaches, and sinus irritation.
?    Common: muscle aches, tooth problems, and sore throat.
?    Less common: anemia and swollen legs or arms.
¦    Rare: swelling below the surface of the skin, especially around the eyes and lips; yellowing of the skin or whites of the eyes, hepatitis, and liver failure. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
For additional side effects of ACTOplus Met, see Metformin (page 696). For additional side effects of Duetact, see Sulfonylurea Diabetes Drugs (page 1065).
Rosiglitazone
•    Common: upper respiratory infections, accidental injuries, and headache.
•    Less, common: swollen legs or arms, back pain.
•    Rare: swelling below the surface of the skin, especially around the eyes and lips; may also affect the hands, feet and throat. Also, hives, anemia, blurry or distorted vision, and low blood sugar. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
For additional side effects of Avandamet, see Metformin (page 696). For additional side effects of Avandaryl, see Sulfonylurea Diabetes Drugs (page 1065).
Drug Interactions
•    Mixing gemfibrozil (for very high triglycerides) with a glitazone increases the amount of the glitazone absorbed into the body. A reduction in the dose of the glitazone may be needed if you start taking gemfibrozil.
•    Rifampin can reduce the amount of a glitazone that is absorbed by the body, possibly leading to higher blood sugar levels.
•    Ketoconazole may significantly increase the amount of pioglitazone in the body. Other drugs that may have a similar effect but have not yet been studied include itraconazole, erythromycin, calcium channel blockers, corticosteroids, cyclosporine, protease inhibitor anti-HIV drugs, tacrolimus, triazolam, and trimetrexate.
•    Mixing pioglitazone with atorvastatin may reduce the amount of either drug in the body.
•    Pioglitazone may reduce the effectiveness of contraceptive drugs containing norethindrone and ethinyl estradiol. Higher-dose contraceptives or another contraceptive method may be needed.
•    Pioglitazone may stimulate the breakdown of other drugs also metabolized in the liver.
•    Taking rosiglitazone and insulin may increase the risk of fluid retention and heart failure.
For additional drug interactions for Avandamet and ACTOpius Met, see Metformin (page 696). For additional drug interactions for Avandaryl and Duetact, see Sulfonylurea Diabetes Drugs (page 1065).
Food Interactions
Grapefruit juice may interfere with the breakdown of pioglitazone in the liver. Otherwise, these drugs may be taken with or without food, except for Avandaryl, which should be taken with the first meal of the day.
Usual Dose
Adult
Pioglitazone: 15-45 mg once a day.
Rosiglitazone: 8 mg once a day or in divided doses. ACTOplus Met: 15/500 mg-45/2550 mg once or twice a day. Avandamet: 2/500 mg-4/1000 mg twice a day.
Avandaryl: 4/1 mg-8/4 mg with the first meal of the day. Duetact: 30/2 mg-30/4 mg once a day.
Child: not recommended. Overdosage
Little is known about the effects of glitazone overdose. Take the victim to a hospital emergency room. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
ISID’atial Information
Diet, calorie control, exercise, and weight loss are essential to controlling type 2 diabetes. Do not depend solely on this drug to manage your condition.
Alcohol, smoking, age, and race do not affect the way that glitazones are processed in the body.
Call your doctor if you develop symptoms Of liver disease, including nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, fatigue, appetite loss, or dark-colored urine.
See your doctor for regular monitoring of blood sugar, glycosylated hemoglobin (a more sensitive indicator of long-term diabetes control), and liver function.
If you forget a dose of any of these medicines, take it as soon as you remember. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the dose you forgot and continue with your regular schedule.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: The safety of using glitazones during pregnancy is not known. Most experts recommend that diabetes be controlled with insulin during pregnancy.
It is not known if glitizones pass into breast milk. Nursing mothers who must take it should consider using infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors may take this drug without special restriction.

Generic Name
Guanabenz (GWAN-uh-benz) 9)
Type of Drug  Anti hypertensive.
Prescribed For  High blood pressure.
General Information
Guanabenz acetate works by depressing the central nervous system by stimulating certain receptors. Initially, guanabenz reduces blood pressure without a major effect on blood vessels; however, btAqAum use of guanabenz may result in the dilation (widening) of blood vessels and a slight slowing of pulse rate. Guanabenz may be taken alone or with a thiazide diuretic.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take guanabenz if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients.
People with severe kidney or liver disease should take this drug with caution. Guanabenz should also be used with caution by people who have had a recent heart attack or stroke.
Drug Interactions
•    Other blood-pressure-lowering agents such as beta blockers increase the effect of guanabenz.
•    The sedating effects of guanabenz are increased by combining it with sedatives, sleeping pills, or other centralnervous-system (CNS) depressants, including alcohol.
•    People taking this drug for high blood pressure should avoid over-the-counter drugs that might aggravate their condition, including decongestants, cold and allergy remedies, and diet pills—all of which may contain stimulants.
Food Interactions
This drug is best taken on an empty stomach, but it may be taken with food if it upsets your stomach.
Usual Dose
Adult: 4 mg twice a day to start, increased gradually to a maximum dose of 32 mg twice a dwy—though doses this large are rarely needed.
Child (under age 12): not recommended.
Overdosage
Overdose causes sleepiness, lethargy, low blood pressure, irritability, pinpoint pupils, and reduced heart rate. Overdose victims should be made to vomit with ipecac syrup—available at any
swollen effects increase with dosage. siness, sedation, dry mouth, dizziness, ache.
st pain; swelling in the hands, legs, or ns or abnormal heart rhythms; stom- pain or discomfort; nausea; diarrhea; ion; anxiety; poor muscle control; de- sleeping; stuffy nose; blurred vision; ains; breathing difficulties; frequent uri- sex drive; impotence; unusual taste in ollen and painful breasts in men.
Possible Side Effects
Risk and severity of sid
• Most common: drowsiness
and headache. • Less common: ches
heart palpitation
•    or abdominal vomiting; constipation
difficulty muscle aches and pains
•    decreased the mouth; and
pharmacy—but call your doctor or poison control center first. If you must go to a hospital emergency room, ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Take guanabenz exactly as prescribed for maximum benefit. If any side effect becomes severe or intolerable, contact your doctor.
Guanabenz often causes tiredness or dizziness; avoid alcohol because it increases these effects. Take care when driving or doing anything that requires concentration.
Do not stop taking guanabenz without your doctor’s approval. Suddenly stopping this drug may cause a rapid increase in blood pressure. Dosage must be gradually reduced by your doctor.
If you forget a dose, take it as soon as you remember. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the one you forgot and continue with your regular schedule. Do not take a double dose. Call your doctor if you miss 2 or more consecutive doses.
Special Populations
PregrianCylBreast-feeding, Guanabenz may affect the fetus. ii should be avoided by women who are or might be pregnant. When guanabenz is considered crucial by your doctor, its potential benefits must be carefully weighed against its risks.
It is not known if guanabenz passes into breast milk. Nursing mothers who must take this drug should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors are more sensitive to the sedating and bloodpressure-lowering effects of guanabenz.

Generic Name
Haloperidol (hal-oe-PER-ih-dol) [M
Brand Name
Haldol         Type of Drug .
Butyroqhv)mearibpsychotic.

Prescribed For
Psychotic disorders, including Tourette’s syndrome; severe behavioral problems in children; short-term treatment of hyperactive children; chronic schizophrenia; vomiting; treatment of acute psychiatric situations; and phencyclidine (PCP) psychosis.
General Information
Haloperidol is one of many nonphenothiazine agents used to treat psychosis. These drugs are equally effective when given in therapeutically equivalent doses. The major differences are in the type and severity of side effects. Some people may respond well to one and not at all to another. Haloperidol acts on a portion of the brain called the hypothalamus. It affects parts of the hypothalamus that control metabolism, body temperature, alertness, muscle tone, hormone balance, and vomiting. Haloperidol is available in liquid form for those who have trouble swallowing tablets.
Cautions and Warnings
Haloperidol should not be used by people who are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients.
People with very low blood pressure, Parkinson’s disease, or blood, liver, heart, or kidney disease should avoid this drug.
If you have glaucoma, epilepsy or a history of seizures, ulcers, or difficulty urinating, haloperidol should be used with caution and under strict supervision of your doctor.
If haloperidol is used to control mania in bipolar disorder, a rapid depressive mood swing may occur.
Haloperidol can upset the body’s temperature-regulating mechanism creating a risk for heat stroke or dehydration.
Haloperidol may cause dystonia, tardive dyskinesia, or neuroleptic malignant syndrome, all serious conditions.
Possible Side Effects
V Most common: drowsiness, blurred vision, constipation, diarrhea, dizziness, dry mouth, headache, loss of appetite, nausea, stomach pain, or sleeplessness.
V Less common: jaundice (yellowing of the whites of the eyes or skin), which may occur in the first 2-4 weeks. The jaundice usually goes away when the drug is discontinued, but there have been cases in which it did not. if gou notice this effect, develop fever, or generally feel unwell, contact your doctor immediately. Other less common side effects are changes in components of the blood, including anemias; raised or lowered blood pressure; abnormal heartbeat; restlessness; anxiety; euphoria (feeling “high”); depression; confusion; acne-like skin reactions; excessive salivation;
Possible Side Effects (continued)
breast engorgement; development  of breast tissue in males; vomiting; excessive sweating-, menstrual irregularities; impotence; and breathing difficulties.
¦ Rare: neurological effects such as spasms of the neck muscles, severe stiffness of the back muscles, rolling back of the eyes, convulsions, difficulty in swallowing, and symptoms associated with Parkinson’s disease. These effects usually disappear after the drug has been withdrawn; however, symptoms of the face, tongue, or jaw may persist for years, especially in seniors with a long history of brain disease. If you experience any of these effects, contact your doctor immediately. Other rare side effects can occur in almost any part of the body. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
Drug Interactions
•    Be cautious about taking haloperidol with barbiturates, sleeping pills, narcotics or other sedatives, tricyclic antidepressants, alcohol, or any other medication that may produce a depressive effect.
•    Combining haloperidol with carbamazepine may decrease the effectiveness of haloperidol requiring a dosage adjustment.
•    The use of azole antifungal agents (e.g. ketoconazole) may cause an increase in haloperidol side effects, possibly requiring adjustments in haloperidol doses.
•    Anticholinergic drugs may reduce the effectiveness of haloperidol and increase the risk of side effects.
•    Severe low blood pressure or heartbeat irregularities may occur if haloperidol is combined with epinephrine or dopamine.
•    Taking lithium together with haloperidol may lead to disorientation, loss of consciousness, ry uncontrolled muscle Mwments.
•    Combining fluoxetine with haloperidol may increase the effects of haloperidol.
•    Haloperidol may increase the effects of antihypertensive drugs.
•    Haloperidol may affect phenytoin levels, as well as levels of
other antipsychotic drugs.
•    Careful dosage monitoring is required if haloperidol is taken
with rifampin.
Food Interactions
Haloperidol is best taken on an empty stomach, but you may take it with food if it upsets your stomach.
Usual Dose
Psychotic disorders
Adult: starting dose-0.5-2 mg 2 or 3 times a day. Some patients may need 3-5 mg 2 or 3 times a day. Rarely, some patients may require up to 100 mg a day.
Child (age 3-12 or 33-88 lbs.): starting dose-0.5 mg a day. Dosage may be increased in 0.5-mg steps every 5-7 days. Child (under age 3): not recommended.
Tourette’s syndrome
Adult: starting dose    0.5-1.5 mg 3 times a day; up to 10 mg a day may be needed.
Child (age 3-12 or 33-88 lbs.): 0.02-0.03 mg per lb. a day. The same dosages apply to children with behavioral disorders or hyperactivity.
Overdosage
Symptoms of overdose are depression, extreme weakness, tiredness, desire to sleep, coma, lowered blood pressure, uncontrolled muscle spasms, agitation, restlessness, convulsions, fever, dry mouth, and abnormal heart rhythm. The patient should be taken to a hospital emergency room immediately. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
This medication may cause drowsiness. Use caution when driving or operating hazardous equipment; also, avoid alcoholic beverages while taking it.
Haloperidol may cause unusual sensitivity to the sun. It may aIF4Q WVR your urine reddish-brown or pink.
If dizziness occurs, avoid sudden changes in posture and avoid climbing stairs.
Avoid extreme heat while taking haloperidol. This medication may make you more prone to heat stroke.
If you forget to take a dose of haloperidol, take it as soon as you remember. Take the rest of the day’s doses evenly spaced throughout the day. Do not take a double dose.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: Serious problems have been seen in pregnant animals given large amounts of haloperidol. Although haloperidol has not been studied in pregnant women, you should avoid this drug if you are or might be pregnant.
Haloperidol passes into breast milk. Nursing mothers who must use this medication should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors are more sensitive to the effects of this medication and usually require 1/4-1/2 the usual adult dose. Seniors are also more likely to develop side effects.

Brand Name
Helidac
Generic Ingredients
Bismuth Subsalicylate + Metronidazole + Tetracycline
The information in this profile also applies to the following drug:
Generic Ingredients: Bismuth Subcitrate Potassium + Metronidazole + Tetracycline
Pylera
Type of Drug  Antibacterial combination.
Prescribed For  Duodenal ulcers.
General Information
Research has shown that the bacterium Helicobacter pylori is usually present in ulcer disease and some forms of gastritis. Drugs used to treat the H. pylori infection are prescribed along with a drug that alleviates ulcer symptoms by blocking stomach acid. There are a variety of approaches to treating ulcers by using combinations of various antibiotic and acid-blocking drugs. Helidac combines 3 drugs with antibacterial or antibiotic action. This combination generally works by disrupting the cell walls of the bacterium and interfering with its ability to make proteins or duplicate
itself. It is often prescribed together with ranitidine, cimetidine, or another acid Mocker. Other treatments use other drug comb-
nations.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take Helidac if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its
ingredients.
Do not take Helidac if you have severe liver or kidney disease. People with less severe liver disease may require a reduced dosage.
Rarely, bismuth causes severe nervous system toxicity. Symptoms go away after the drug is stopped.
Bismuth subsalicylate can cause dark stools or darkening of the tongue. This darkening of stools is not dangerous; however, be aware that blood in the stool often manifests as blackening of the stool.
Children or teenagers who have or are recovering from chickenpox should not use Helidac because it contains a small amount of salicylate, which is related to aspirin. Children or teenagers who take aspirin or a salicylate may develop Reye’s syndrome: symptoms include nausea and vomiting.
Bismuth can also cause ringing in the ears, especially if taken along with another aspirin-containing drug.
Metronidazole can cause convulsive seizures and nervous system effects including numbness or tingling in the arms, legs, hands, or feet. The risk of developing these effects increases with dosage and duration of use. Call your doctor at once if you experience any of these effects.
Metronidazole should be taken with caution by people who have had blood diseases or nervous system disorders, such as seizure disorders.
Candida infections may worsen while you are taking metronidazole.
Other infections, called superinfections, can develop while you are taking tetracycline. If this happens, your doctor will discontinue Helidac and prescribe a different drug to treat your H. pylori infection, ;a% %0M as another drug to treat the superinfection.
Tetracycline should not be used in children under age 8 due to the risk of tooth discoloration.
People taking tetracycline can develop pseudotumor cerebri (pressure inside the brain), the symptoms of which are usually headache and blurred vision. Symptoms usually go away when the drug is stopped, but permanent damage can result.
Tetracycline may increase your sensitivity to the sun; use sun-
screen and wear protective clothing.
Tetracycline may make contraceptive drugs less effective. Another or additional forms of contraceptive should be used.
Possible Side Effects
?    Most common: nausea and diarrhea.
?    Less common: abdominal pain, blood in the stool, head-
ache, anal discomfort, appetite loss, dizziness, tingling in
the hands or feet, vomiting, muscle weakness, constipa-
tion, sleeplessness, pain, and respiratory infections.
For more information on possible side effects, see Metronidazole, page 718, and Tetracycline Antibiotics, page 1103.
Drug Interactions
•    Tetracycline antibiotics, which are bacteriostatic, may interfere with the action of bactericidal (bacteria-killing) agents such as penicillin. You should not take both kinds of antibiotics for the same infection.
•    Antacids, mineral supplements, and multivitamins containing bismuth, calcium, zinc, magnesium, and iron can reduce the effectiveness of tetracycline. Separate doses of your antacid, mineral supplement, vitamin with minerals, or sodium bicarbonate and Helidac by at least 2 hours.
•    Tetracycline and metronidazole may each increase the effect of anticoagulant (blood-thinning) drugs such as warfarin. An adjustment in the anticoagulant dosage may be required.
•    Cimetidine can increase metronidazole blood levels. Your metronidazole dosage may be reduced if you are also taking cimetidine.
•    Tetracycline should not be used with methoxyflurane due to the risk of a toxic interaction.
•    Tetracycline may increase blood levels of digoxin in a small number of people, leading to possible digoxin side etezks. (” %kjMt pelop% 1his’interaction with digoxin can occur for months after tetracycline has been stopped. If you are taking this combination, watch carefully for digoxin side effects and call your doctor if any develop.
•    Tetracycline may reduce diabetic insulin requirements. If you are using this combination, be sure to carefully monitor your blood-sugar level.
•    Tetracycline may increase or decrease lithium blood levels. Metronidazole raises lithium blood levels, effects, and toxicity.
•    Combining alcohol and metronidazole may cause abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, headaches, and flushing. Modification of the taste of alcohol has also been reported. Metronidazole should not be used if you are taking disulfiram (a drug used to maintain alcohol abstinence) because the combination can cause confusion and psychotic reactions.
•    Phenobarbital and other barbiturates can decrease metronidazole’s effectiveness.
•    Drugs that cause nervous system toxicity, such as mexiletine, ethambutol, isoniazid, lincomycin, lithium, pemoline, and long-term high-dose pyridoxine (vitamin 136) should not be taken with metronidazole because of the increased risk of nervous system side effects.
•    Metronidazole may increase phenytoin blood levels and the risk of phenytoin side effects; your doctor may need to adjust your phenytoin dosage.
Food Interactions
Do not take this drug with milk or dairy products. Helidac should be taken with meals and at bedtime.
Usual Dose
Helidac
Adult: Each dose consists of 4 pills. Take all 4 pills, 4 times a day for 14 days with a full glass of water. Take your acid blocker according to your doctor’s directions.
Child: not recommended.
Pyles
Adult: 3 pills 4 times a day for 10 days with a full glass of water. Take your acid blocker according to your doctor’s directions. Child: not recommended.
Overdosage
All 3 in(aMd1K1t ,in Helidac can be dangerous if taken in overdose, but salicylate poisoning is the most threatening. Symptoms of salicylate toxicity are rapid or heavy breathing, nausea, vomiting, ringing or buzzing in the ears, high fever, lethargy, rapid heartbeat, and confusion. Other more serious symptoms may develop. Take the victim to a hospital emergency room at once. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Tetracycline can reduce the effectiveness of contraceptive drugs; you should use backup contraception while taking Helidac. Breakthrough bleeding is also possible.
Bismuth can cause a temporary darkening of your tongue or stool. This is a harmless effect. Stool darkening should not be confused with blood in the stool, which turns it black.
Avoid alcohol while taking Helidac and for 1 day after you stop taking it.
Call your doctor if you develop ringing in the ears. This can be a sign of salicylate toxicity from the bismuth.
If you forget a dose, take it as soon as you remember. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the dose you forgot and continue with your regular schedule. Never take a double dose.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: Helidac should not be taken by pregnant women. Tetracycline affects bone and tooth development in the fetus.
Tetracycline and metronidazole pass into breast milk. Tetracycline interferes with the development of the child’s skull, bones, and teeth, and metronidazole also may cause side effects in the baby. Nursing mothers who must take Helidac should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors may take this drug without special restriction.

Infertility Problem.

Friday, August 7th, 2009

Over the last two decades, there has been a significant rise in the number of couples experiencing fertility problems:
•    Sperm counts have dropped by 50 per cent in the last ten years.’
•    Men are showing an increasing number of sperm abnormalities.
•    A quarter of all couples planning a baby have trouble conceiving.
•    It is not uncommon for a couple without any fertility problems to take two to three years to conceive.
•    One in four women miscarry. Some experience repeated miscarriages – as often as ten times.
•    More and more couples are turning to fertility treatments to enable them to have a family.
•    Of the couples who seek medical help, 30 per cent are told they have ‘unexplained infertility’ for which the doctors can offer no treatment.
If you are reading this book, you or your partner may have experienced problems trying to have a baby. You may have gone through fertility treatments that failed. Or you may just be worried that nothing is happening. I see hundreds of couples every year who are trying to conceive and I fully understand their unhappiness and frustration at not being able to achieve something that most of us grew up believing would happen whenever we wanted.
But, as the above statistics reveal, you are not alone. There is an epidemic of infertility and subfertility – and in many cases the doctors do not know the answers.
But, before we discuss these issues, I want to say:
Don’t lose heart
I believe that getting yourself and your partner into optimum health, usin the four-month programme outlined in this book, will give you the best possible chance of having that longed-for, healthy baby.
I don’t just believe it — I know it. By the time you have finished readin), this book, I hope I will have inspired you and your partner to take contrd of your health and fertility.
Nature is wonderfully clever. At this particular moment you may not think so, because on the most fundamental level, reproduction, it seems to have let you down. But the purpose of this book is to encourage you to restore your own and your partner’s fertility to its proper ‘natural’ state by simple lifestyle and dietary changes that eliminate toxins from your bod i and ensure that you have the level of nutrients needed for conception.
Fundamentals of Health
In the animal world, fertility is paramount for the survival of any specie However, the human race today has a number of fertility problems. Men are showing sperm abnormalities (such as sperm with two heads or sperm tha-:
are so sluggish they cannot reach the egg). Some women have a number Or menstrual cycles during which they do not ovulate; or, when fertilisation happens, the embryo does not implant in the womb.
To explain these anomalies, we have to go back to the foundations 0: health.The egg and sperm are only as healthy as the man and woman who produce them. If there are any problems with either the egg or the sperm. however subtle, nature will either try to stop fertilisation occurring or, if i does take place, a miscarriage may follow.
One reason why so many couples are diagnosed with ‘unexplained infer - tility’ is that doctors cannot put it down to a specific, observable medical cause. But I believe that infertility is a multi-factorial problem and should be investigated that way. That means looking at a variety of issues, such a, nutrition, alcohol and smoking habits, levels of lead and other toxic metals pesticides, food additives, genito-urinary infections, allergies, stress and other hazards of modern life.That means your partner taking a close look a: his health and nutrition as well (in four out of ten cases of infertility, the problems are on the male side). The fact is that our modern ‘unnatural lifestyle, combined with the nutrient depletion of much of our food, ha;
left many of us deficient in the vitamins and minerals we need for successful babymaking.
Any specialist who works in a zoo, or breeds champion dogs, cattle or racehorses, will tell you that optimum nutrition is essential. But, while the fertility clinic business is booming (with desperate couples lining up for treatment), there isn’t much incentive to look at whether simple factors, like a deficiency of zinc for instance, may be the main reason for unexplained infertility.
Learning From the Past
We should learn from the folic acid story, which really demonstrates the importance of nutrition and how a crucial deficiency identified by researchers as being responsible for birth abnormalities was ignored by doctors for years.
In 1991 the Medical Research Council (MRC) finally published a study which showed that supplementing with folic acid during preconception and pregnancy could prevent the reccurrence of spina bifida in babies.’ Yet the damaging effects of a folic acid deficiency had been recognised three decades earlier, after rats were born with malformations (including neural tube defects) and other problems (such as club foot and cleft palate) in folic acid trials.’
This knowledge, which could have prevented a great deal of heartache, had been around for over 30 years and yet women were not told to take folic acid for decades.These early findings were confirmed again in humans in 1981 trials that looked at the effects of folic acid on the prevention of spina bifida.’
Even as recently as 1993 the Daily Mail ran an article asking ‘Could this vitamin save your baby?” It said, `The fact that a supplement which can stop women having spina bifida babies remains the best kept secret of preconceptual care has now prompted sharp criticism from the medical world: ‘
Cynically, one might suppose that if folic acid had not been a simple easy-to-obtain supplement but a highly profitable pharmaceutical drug we would all have known about it years ago. You cannot patent a nutrient so there is no commercial incentive to investigate and promote it.
But the big lesson we should learn from the folic acid story is that our diet — what we eat or don’t eat — is absolutely crucial to our fertility.
How to Use This Book
Folic acid is only the tip of the iceberg. Medical and scientific literature contains a great deal of information that call help couples who are having difficulty conceiving or who have had previous problems such as miscarriages and malformations. This book presents that information in an easyto-understand form so that you call use it yourself. Having this knowledge will help you gain control of your own health and fertility.
By following the advice in this book you can increase your fertility anc reduce the possibility of miscarriage. liven if you have a condition like blocked fallopian tubes (which means that you need IVF treatment in order to have a chance of conceiving), this book will increase your chance of success. With assisted conception techniques it is still vital for the sperm anc the egg to be as healthy as possible.
As you read the recommendations, you’ll realise that the changes you make to increase your fertility are the same as those that will protect you from miscarriage and help you produce a healthy baby. They are also, quite simply, recommendations that will improve your general health. The advice
is so logical and makes such sense that you will probably wonder why nc one has told you all this before.
Finding that you can’t conceive when you want is a real shock and it is not something that many of us want to talk about even to our close friends and families. GPs and consultants are busy people and, all too often, overworked. The minute you come out of the consulting room you think of .1 dozen other things you wanted to discuss. There just isn’t time to talk in as much depth as you would like. Yet you want to find out as much as you can.This book is designed to answer your specific queries as well as present a comprehensive self-help programme that will give you and your partner the best chance of conceiving.
•    Section 1 outlines the different aspects of your life and health that could be causing your and your partner’s problem. This will help you identify what may be going wrong.
•    Section 2 explains how you can help improve your and your partner’s fertility, concentrating particularly on good nutrition and Supplementing your diet.This is one of the most crucial sections in the book because it could be the key to solving your infertility problem by making some simple changes that are entirely within your own control.
•    Section 3 explains what tests are available to help you identify any medical cause of infertility. It is important that your partner understands that lie must also be involved in this process.
•    Section 4 describes the different fertility treatments available in the UK and reveals some heartening evidence that you and your partner can dramatically improve your chances of having successful fertility treatment, if you should need it, by following the advice in this book.
•    Section 5 discusses the problem of miscarriage in depth and shows how you can help yourself overcome it.
•    Section 6 puts it all into practice – and shows you how to organise your self-help programme for those vital months of preparation.This is really the most essential part of the book.
•    Section 7 tells you how to care for yourself in pregnancy so as to ensure that you Krill have a healthy baby.
I believe that any couple planning to have a baby would benefit from following the kind of recommendations outlined in this book – not just Couples who have had problems conceiving.
If all this sounds too hard to stick to, just think how important it is … We plan our holidays and we train for a career so why should we expect to just have babies without any proper planning or preparation.- This preconception care period of three or four months shapes your baby’s future, both physically and mentally, so it could be the most important bit of planning you ever do in your life. My aim is to help you and your partner to optimum health to give you both the best chance of having a healthy baby. As a bonus, following these recommendations will make you both feel better, fitter and more energetic.
Self-help Strategies
Most couples who seek fertility treatment find out a great deal about sophisticated medical technologies but very little about the relatively simple measures they themselves can take to improve their chances of conceiving. These highly effective self-help strategies include easily implemented dietary and lifestyle changes. Such measures cost little or nothing, their success has been scientifically documented, and yet most of these couples will not have been told about them.Why on earth is this–
The cynical answer is that infertility has become `big business’.As Professor Robert Winston points out in his book Making Babies, there are now at least 21 IVF units in London alone. And more and more units are opening because they are ‘highly profitable in the private sector’. Couples who desperately want to have a baby are very vulnerable. Even though some IVF units have extremely low success rates, such couples are still willing to gamble a great deal of time and money in order to try to conceive.
In contrast, there are no big financial gains to be made in helping couple to look at their lifestyle or to correct their vitamin and mineral deficiencies Yet this approach makes such sense, and has been shown to give an unprecedented success rate.
Over the last 20 years, Foresight has pioneered an approach to fertility that looks at the fundamentals of health, including lifestyle, diet, pollutants, infections and environmental and occupational hazards and gives an unprecedented 80 per cent success rate. Researchers from the University of Surrey followed the progress of 367 couples over a period of three years (1990-3). The women were aged between 22 and 45, and the men were aged 25 to 59. In all, 37 per cent of the couples had a history of infertility, and 38 per cent had experienced between one and five miscarriages (others had had other problems, including still births, malformations and low birth-weight babies).
Many of the couples were older, coming to the trial as a1ast resort’.They were all asked to eliminate smoking and alcohol, and to follow the recommendations outlined in this book (such as buying organic food, having infections checked and having mineral analysis). All the couples were given personal supplement programmes and were then re-tested to make sure their levels had returned to normal.
By the end of the three-year trial, 89 per cent (327 of the couples) had given birth. Out of those couples with a previous history of infertility, 81 per cent conceived and had babies. Out of those who had experienced a previous miscarriage, 83 per cent had a baby within the three years of the Study, without experiencing another miscarriage.
Of the 327 babies born to the couples in the study, no baby was born before 36 weeks and none was lighter than 51b 2oz (2.368kg).There were no miscarriages, perinatal deaths or malformations. The national average for miscarriages is one in four so one could at least have expected 80 miscarriages, but there were none. No baby was admitted to a special care baby unit.
A number of the couples had already tried IVF – sometimes two or three times – without success.Yet 65 per cent of this group conceived naturally on the Foresight programme without needing another IVF cycle.
These results are undeniably impressive and speak for themselves. Yet sceptics maintain that they are ‘too good to be true’.To date, the results have been published in the Journal of Nutritional and Environmental Medicine but not in a standard medical journal.’ This is because, in order to be accepted by a medical journal, there must be a control group.
Ina normal double-blind placebo controlled trial, to assess the efficacy of a headache remedy, for example, volunteers are randomly assigned to either a control group (placebo) or a treatment group (headache remedy). The volunteers don’t know if they are taking the placebo or the remedy, and nor does the scientist running the trial. All the volunteers in the treated group get the same dose of headache remedy.
However, in this study each person was given an individual supplement programme according to their needs. So they were all taking different dosages and supplements, depending on how deficient or toxic they were.
This is an important point because the double-blind placebo controlled trial is the ‘gold standard’ in medicine but it cannot take into account that we are all unique and that we may need different treatments to increase our fertility. And it is this ‘individually tailored’ approach which I believe is the key to finding a natural solution to infertility. The fact is that 37 per cent of the couples in this study had an established history of fertility problems and had undergone medical investigation. They did something different – changed their dietary habits and lifestyle – and then conceived. The information contained in this book explains in detail my enhanced version of this preconception programme.
It worked for them. It could work for you.

Deferasirox, Desmopressin, Diazepam

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Generic Name
Deferasirox (deh-fur-ASS-sih-rox)
Brand Name Exjade
Type of Drug
Iron chelating agent. Prescribed For
Chronic iron overload. General Information
Deferasirox binds with iron in stored in the liver. It can also bind small amounts of zinc and copper but the importance of these effects are not known. Almost 3/4 of every dose is absorbed into the bloodstream. Most of the drug is broken down in the liver and passes out of the body in the feces. Women clear this drug from their bodies 17.5% slower than men, but this has not affected how it is used or the doses given.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take deferasirox if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients. Most reactions occur within the first month of treatment.
People with liver disease should have monthly blood tests while taking deferasirox.
Kidney failure has developed in people taking deferasirox with fatal results in some cases. People with or those who are at risk of kidney failure should have routine kidney monitoring while taking this medication. People who are at risk for kidney failure in-ciudes seniors, those with kidney disease, and people taking medicines that affect kidney function. Dose adjustment may be needed.
Deferasirox has been associated with potentially severe reduced white-blood-cell and platelet counts, usually in people with preexisting blood disorders.
Rarely, deferasirox has caused hearing loss and eye problems. You should have a full hearing and eye exam before starting on this drug and once a year thereafter.
Skin rash can occur with this medicine. If it is severe, the drug may have to be temporarily stopped. It may be restarted at a lower dosage.
Possible Side Effects
♦    Most common: fever, headache, abdominal pain, cough, sore throat, nasal irritation, diarrhea, flu symptoms, nausea, and vomiting.
✓    Common: respiratory infections, bronchitis, runny nose, rash, upper abdominal pain, joint pain, back pain, tonsillitis, and ear infection.
✓    Less common: itching.
✓    Rare: stomach pain, swelling in the arms or legs, sleep disorder, skin color changes, dizziness, anxiety, gallstones, fatigue, early cataract and hearing loss, some visual haziness, and other eye disorders. Contact your doctor if you experience anything unusual.
Drug Interactions
•    Do not mix antacids containing aluminum with deferasirox. They can prevent it from being absorbed.
Food Interactions
This drug should be taken at the same time every day on an empAq stomach, 30 minutes before eating.
Ustlak 13bSe
Adult and Child (age 2 and over): 9-13.6 mg per lb. of body weight once a day. Dose adjustments will be made according to your response. See “Special Information” for a specific instructions on how to take these tablets.
Overdosage
Large doses of 2-3 times the prescribed amount taken for several weeks with no adverse effects have occurred. Overdose symptoms include hepatitis (mild fever, muscle or joint aches, nausea, vomiting, appetite loss, slight abdominal pain, diarrhea, and fatigue) and some drug side effects. Take the victim to a hospital emergency room for treatment because the heart may be affected. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Call your doctor at once if you develop a severe skin rash.
You must have regular vision and hearing tests while taking deferasirox.
Deferasirox tablets should not be chewed or swallowed whole. They must first be mixed completely in 1/2-1 glass of water, orange juice, or apple juice. The tablet will not dissolve but tablet particles will become suspended in the liquid. Drink the resulting sus-Pension immediately. If there is anything left in the glass after drinking the suspension, add a small amount of liquid, mix it with the remaining tablet particles and drink it.
This drug can cause dizziness. Be cautious while driving, operating machinery, or doing anything that requires intense concentration.
If you forget a dose, take it as soon as you remember. If it is almost time for the next dose, skip the one you forgot and continue with your regular schedule. Do not take a double dose.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: There are no studies of ranolazine in pregnant women or of its effect on the developing fetus. Pregnant women should take this drug only if its potential benefits outweigh the risks.
This drug may pass into breast milk. Nursing mothers should consider using infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors may experience more drug side effects than younger adults due to greater chances of reduced kidney, liver, and heart function; other diseases; or drug side effects.

Generic Name
Desmopressin (dez-moe-PRES-in)
Brand Names
DDAVP Minirin
Type of Drug
Pituitary hormone replacement.
Stimate
Prescribed For
Nighttime bed-wetting and diabetes insipidus (central or cranial diabetes); also used to control bleeding in certain forms of hemophilia A and von Willebrand’s disease.
General Information
Desmopressin acetate is a synthetic version of antidiuretic hormone (ADH). When ADH is lacking, the body has difficulty retaining fluid. People lacking ADH experience excessive thirst, increased urination, and dehydration; desmopressin controls these symptoms. When used for nighttime bed-wetting, desmopressin should be used in conjunction with behavioral or other non-drug therapies.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take desmopressin if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients.
People, especially children and seniors and people with cystic fibrosis and electrolyte imbalances, should only drink enough fluid to satisfy their thirst while taking desmopressin because of the risk of water intoxication, which can result in seizures that could lead to coma. People with coronary artery disease, heart disease, or high blood pressure should use this drug with caution.
Heart attacks and St&D’KeS after treatment with desmopressin MV~bEbn reported in people at risk for them, but there is no definite link to desmopressin use.
People using desmopressin should have their urine checked regularly by their doctor. Your doctor should also check for nasal swelling, congestion, and scarring.
Drug Interactions
experience in blood pressure, loss of sodium, symptoms include coma, confusion, ng headache, decreased urination, rapid
zures), edema, stomach or abdominal dness or flushing of the skin, passing ain, and stuffy or runny nose. Contact perience any side effect not listed above.
Possible Side Effects
V Rare: slight increase
intoxication (
drowsiness, continuin
gain, and seizures)
nausea, rednes
vulvar pain
doctor if you
•    Desmopressin may increase the effects of other drugs that raise blood pressure. This only happens with large dosages.
•    Chlorpropamide and carbamazepine may increase the effects of desmopressin.
Food Interactions None known.
Usual Dose
Nasal Solution—Nighttime Bed-Wetting
Adult and Child (age 6 and over): 20 mcg (0.2 mL) at bedtime. Child (under age 6): not recommended.
Nasal Solution—Diabetes Insipidus
Adult: 0.1-0.4 mL a day in 1-3 doses.
Child (age 3 months-12 years): 0.05-0.3 mL a day in 1-2 doses.
Tablets—Nighttime Bed-wetting
Adult and Child (age 6 and over): Begin with 0.2 mg at bedtime, adjusting to individual need up to 0.6 mg.
Child (under age 6): not recommended.
Tablets—Diabetes Insipidus
Adult: Begin with 0.05 mg twice a day. Daily dosage should be increased according to individual need, up to 1.2 mg a day divided into 2-3 doses.
Child (age 4 aid over): Begin with 0.05 mg and adjust according to individual need.
Child (under age 4): not recommended.
Overdosage
Symptoms include headache, difficulty breathing, abdominal cramps, nausea, and facial flushing. Call your doctor or a hospi-tal emergency room if you suspect an overdose. Because there is no known antidote to desmopressin, your dosage may be temporarily reduced until overdose symptoms subside. If you seek treatment, ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Call your doctor if you develop headache, breathing difficulties, heartburn, nausea, abdominal or stomach cramps, or vulvar pain.
The Stimate Nasal Solution spray pump and Minirin spray must be primed before its first use. To prime the pump, press down 4 times. Stimate delivers 25 doses per bottle. Throw away the bottle after 25 doses have been used, because anything remaining after the 25th dose is likely to deliver less drug than is needed.
If you forget a dose of desmopressin, take it as soon as you remember. If you don’t remember until your next dose, skip the forgotten dose and continue with your regular schedule. Do not take a double dose.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: The safety of using desmopressin during pregnancy is not known, though it has been used to treat diabetes insipidus in pregnant women without apparent harm to the fetus. When this drug is considered crucial by your doctor, its potential benefits must be carefully weighed against its risks.
Desmopressin may pass into breast milk. Nursing mothers who must use this drug should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors should avoid drinking too much fluid while taking desmopressin.

Generic Name
Diazepam (dye-AZ-uh-pam) rVg_l
Brand Names
Diastat    Valium
Diazepam Intensol    Valrelease
The information in this profile also applies to the following drugs:
Lorazepam &
Ativan    Lorazepam Intensol
Oxazepam M
Type of Drug  Benzodiazepine sedative.
Prescribed For
Anxiety, tension, fatigue, agitation (particularly due to alcohol withdrawal), muscle spasm, and seizures; also prescribed for irritable bowel syndrome and panic attacks.
General Information
Diazepam and other benzodiazepines directly affect the brain. They can relax you and make you more tranquil or sleepy, or they can slow nervous system transmissions in such a way as to act as an anticonvulsant.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take diazepam if you know you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients or to another benzodiazepine drug, including clonazepam.
Diazepam can aggravate narrow-angle glaucoma, but you may take it if you have open-angle glaucoma and are receiving therapy for it.
Other conditions in which diazepam should be avoided are severe depression, severe lung disease, steep apnea (intermittent cessation of breathing during sleep), liver disease, drunkenness, and kidney disease. In all of these conditions, the depressive effects of diazepam may be enhanced or could be detrimental to your overall condition.
Diazepam should not be taken by psychotic patients. It is not effective for them and can trigger unusual excitement, stimulation, and rage.
Diazepam is not intended for more \han 3-4 months of continuous use. Your comikkni) should be reassessed before continuing YOU( MS-16cation beyond that time.
Diazepam may be addictive. It should be used with caution in people with a history of drug dependence.
Drug withdrawal may develop if you stop taking it after only 4 weeks of regular use but is more likely after longer use. It may start with anxiety and progress to tingling in the hands or feet, sensi-tivity to bright light, sleep disturbances, cramps, tremors, muscle tension or twitching, poor concentration, flu-like symptoms, fatigue, appetite loss, sweating, and changes in mental state. Your dosage should always be reduced gradually to prevent drug withdrawal symptoms.
Possible Side Effects
Y Most common: mild drowsiness during the first few days of therapy. Weakness and confusion may occur, especially in seniors and in those who are sickly. If these effects persist, contact your doctor.
♦ Less common: depression, lethargy, disorientation, headache, inactivity, slurred speech, stupor, dizziness, tremors, constipation, dry mouth, nausea, inability to control urination, sexual difficulties, irregular menstrual cycle, changes in heart rhythm, low blood pressure, fluid retention, blurred or double vision, itching, rash, hiccups, nervousness, hysteria, psychosis, inability to fall asleep, and occasional liver dysfunction. If you have any of these symptoms, stop taking the drug and contact your doctor at once.
•    Rare: Rare side effects can affect your heart, stomach and intestines, urinary tract, blood, muscles, and joints. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
Drug Interactions
•    Diazepam is a central-nervous-system depressant. Avoid alcohol, other sedatives, narcotics, barbiturates, monoamine oxidase inhibitor antidepressants, antihistamines, and antidepressants. Taking diazepam with these drugs may lead to excessive depression, drowsiness, or difficulty breathing.
•    Smoking may reduce diazepam’s effectiveness by increasing the rate at which it is broken down by the body.
•    Effects of diazepam may be prolonged when taken with cimeti(1(m,, Contraceptive drugs, disulfiram, fluoxetine, isoniazid, ketoconazole, rifampin, metoprolol, probenecid, propoxyphene, propranolol, and valproic acid.
•    Theophylline may reduce the sedative effects of diazepam.
•    If you take antacids, separate them from your diazepam dose by at least 1 hour to prevent them from interfering with the passage of diazepam into the bloodstream.
•    Diazepam may increase blood levels of digoxin and the chances for digoxin toxicity.
•    Levodopa + carbidopa’s effects may be decreased if it is taken with diazepam.
Combining diazepam and phenytoin may increase phenytoin blood concentrations and the risk of phenytoin toxicity.
Food Interactions
Diazepam is best taken on an empty stomach, but it may be taken with food if it upsets your stomach.
Usual Dose
Solution or Tablets
Adult’. 2-40 mg a day. Dosage must be adjusted to individual response for maximum effect. In seniors, less of the drug is usually required to control tension and anxiety.
Child (6 months and over): 1-2.5 mg 3 or 4 times a day; more may be needed to control anxiety and tension.
Child (under 6 months): not recommended.
Rectal Gel
Adult and Child (age 12 and over): 0.09 mg per lb. of body weight. Approximate dosage: 5 mg if 31-60 lbs., 10 mg if 61 -110 lbs., 15 mg if 111-165 lbs., or 20 mg if 166-244 lbs.
Child (age 6-11): 0.14 mg per lb. of body weight. Approximate dosage: 5 mg if 22-40 lbs., 10 mg if 41-82 lbs., 15 mg if 83-121 lbs., or 20 mg if 122-163 lbs.
Child (age 2-5): 0.23 mg per lb. of body weight. Approximate dosage: 5 mg if 13-24 lbs., 10 mg if 25-49 lbs., 15 mg if 50-73 lbs., or 20 mg if 74-97 lbs.
An extra 2.5 mg of the rectal gel may be given if a more precise dosage is needed or as a partial replacement for people who do not retain the full dosage after it is first inserted rectally.
Overdosage
SYMPUns of overdose include confusion, sleepiness, poor coordination, lack of response to pain, loss of reflexes, shallow breathing, low blood pressure, and coma. The victim should be taken to a hospital emergency room. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.