Aug
12
Donnatal - Doxazosin - Doxercalciferol - Dronabinol - Dyazide
August 12, 2009 |
Brand Name
Donnatal
Generic Ingredients
Atropine Sulfate + Hyoscyamine Sulfate + Phenobarbital + Scopolamine Hydrobromide EQ
Other Brand Names Antispas
Antispasmodic Barbidonna
Bellatal
Donnapine
Donnatal Extentabs Hyosophen Spasmolin
The information in this profile also applies V) the following drugs: Generic /nqcedjer)t: Hyoscyamine Sulfate 0
Anaspaz ED-SPAZ
A-Spas S/L Hyosol
Cytospaz Hyosyne
Donnamar IB-Stat
Levbid Levsin
Levsinex Timecaps Medispaz
DONNATAL
Neosol NuLev Spasdel Symax
Generic Ingredient: Propantheline 92 Pro-Banthine
Type of Drug
Anticholinergic combination.
Prescribed For
Stomach spasm and gastrointestinal (GI) cramps; also used to treat motion sickness.
General Information
Donnatal is a mild antispasmodic sedative. Its principal action is to counteract the effect of acetylcholine, an important neurohormone. Donnatal is used only to relieve symptoms. not to treat the underlying condition, and there is considerable doubt among medical experts that this drug lives up to its claims. In addition to the brand names listed above, there are about 50 other anticholinergic combinations with similar properties. All are used to relieve cramps and all are about equally effective. Some have additional ingredients to reduce or absorb excess gas in the stomach, to coat the stomach, or to control diarrhea. Donnatal and products like it should not be used for more than the temporary relief of symptoms.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take Donnatal if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients.
Donnatal should not be used by people with glaucoma, rapid heartbeat, severe intestinal disease such as ulcerative colitis, intestinal obstruction, urinary difficulties, asthma, myasthenia gravis, acute intermittent porphyria, acute bleeding with unstable heart function, or hiatal hernia.
Phenobarbital may be, habit-forming and should not be admin(Ste_%16 10 people with a history of drug dependence.
Donnatal should be used with caution in children and in people with brain damage, spastic paralysis, Down’s syndrome, heart disease, high blood pressure, hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid gland), kidney or liver disease, autonomic neuropathy, or gastric ulcer.
Donnatal can reduce your ability to sweat and may lead to heat exhaustion. Avoid extended heavy exercise and limit your exposure to high temperatures.
Possible Side Effects
♦ Most common: blurred vision, dry mouth, urinary difficulties, flushing, and dry skin.
♦ Less common: rapid or unusual heartbeat, increased sensitivity to bright light, loss of the sense of taste, headache, nervousness, tiredness, weakness, dizziness, sleeplessness, nausea, vomiting, fever, stuffy nose, heartburn, loss of sex drive, decreased sweating, constipation, feeling bloated, and allergic reactions such as fever and rash.
Drug Interactions
• Although Donnatal contains only a small amount of phenobarbital, it is wise to avoid alcohol or other sedative drugs. Although unlikely, phenobarbital interactions are possible with anticoagulants, adrenal corticosteroids, narcotics, sleeping pills, digitalis or other cardiac glycosides, and antihistamines.
• Some phenothiazine drugs, sedatives, tricyclic antidepressants, and narcotics may increase the side effects of the atropine sulfate ingredient in Donnatal, causing dry-mouth, urinary difficulties, and constipation. The effectiveness of phenothiazines to control psychotic symptoms may be decreased.
• Combining Donnatal and the antiviral amantadine may increase the side effects of Donnatal.
• Donnatal may increase the side effects of atenolol and digoxin.
• Antacids may decrease Donnatal’s effectiveness; do not take antacids within 1 hour of taking Donnatal.
Food Interactions
‘%ke Donnatal 30-60 minutes before meals.
Usual Dose
Donnatal
Adult (age 13 and over): 1-2 tablets, capsules, or tsp. 3-4 times a day, or 1 extended-release tablet every 12 hours.
Child (age 2-12): 112 the adult dosage. Child (under age 2): not recommended.
Propantheline
Adult-. 15 mg 3 times a day before meals, and 30 mg at bedtime. Senior: 7.5 mg 3 times a day.
Child (under age 12): not recommended.
Overdosage
Symptoms of overdose include dry mouth; difficulty swallowing; thirst; blurred vision; sensitivity to bright light; flushed, hot, or dry skin; rash; fever; abnormal heart rate; high blood pressure; urinary difficulties; restlessness; confusion; delirium; and breathing difficulties. The victim should be taken to a hospital emergency room immediately. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Call your doctor if you experience persistent diarrhea, bloating, fever, heart palpitations, rash, flushing, or eye pain.
Do not crush or chew Donnatal tablets.
Dry mouth usually can be relieved by chewing gum or sucking hard candy or ice chips. Constipation can be treated with a stool-softening laxative.
Donnatal may reduce the amount of saliva in your mouth, making it easier for bacteria to grow there. Pay special attention to dental hygiene while taking this medication to prevent cavities and gum disease.
Donnatal may cause drowsiness and blurred vision. Be careful when driving or operating hazardous equipment.
If you forget to take a dose of Donnatal, 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.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: Donnatal may cause drug dependency or breathing problems in newborns and may interfere with labor aM delivery. When this drug is considered crucial by your doctor, its potential must be carefully weighed against its risks.
Donnatal may pass into breast milk and may reduce the amount of milk produced. It may cause tiredness, shortness of breath, and a slower-than-normal heartbeat in infants. Nursing mothers who must take this medication should consider using infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors are often more sensitive to the side effects of Donnatal, such as excitement, confusion, drowsiness, agitation, constipation, dry mouth, and urinary difficulties. Memory may be impaired and glaucoma worsened.
Generic Name
Doxazosin (dok-SAY-zoe-sin) In
Brand Names
Cardura. Cardura XL
Type of Drug Antihypertensive.
Prescribed For
High blood pressure and benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH); also used with digoxin and diuretic drugs to treat congestive heart failure.
General Information
Doxazosin mesylate and other alpha-adrenergic blocking agents, or alpha blockers, reduce blood pressure by dilating (widening) blood vessels. They achieve this effect by blocking nerve endings known as alpha, receptors. The maximum blood-pressurelowering effect of doxazosin is seen between 2 and 6 hours after taking a dose. In BPH treatment, doxazosin works by relaxing smooth muscles in the prostate and neck of the bladder. Doxazosin helps the symptoms of BPH, and taking it for several years may eliminate the need for surgery or allow the use of a less invasive type of surgery. Doxazosin’s effect lasts for 24 hours. It is mostly broken down in the liver; little passes out of the body via the kidneys.
Doxazosin may slightly reduce cholesterol levels and improve the ratio of high-density lipoprotein (HDL)—”good” cholestemAand low-density lipoprotein (ILDL}—”bad cholesterol”—a positive step for peQ¢kp_%Aln a blood-cholesterol problem.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take doxazosin if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients or to any alpha blocker.
Doxazosin may cause dizziness and fainting, especially the first few doses. This is known as a first-dose effect, which can be minimized by limiting the first dose to 1 mg at bedtime. First-dose effects occur in about i % of people taking an alpha blocker and may recur if the drug is stopped for a few days and then started
again.
Doxazosin should be taken with caution if you have liver
disease.
White-blood-cell counts may be slightly decreased in people
taking doxazosin.
Rarely, alpha blockers, including doxazosin, have led to pri-
apism (painful and prolonged erection). Call your doctor immediately if this happens. If not treated promptly, this condition can lead to impotence.
Possible Side Effects
✓ Most common: headache, dizziness, and weakness.
♦ Less common: heart palpitations, abnormal heart rhythms, chest pain, nausea, diarrhea, constipation, abdominal pain or discomfort, gas, breathing difficulties, nosebleed, sore throat, runny nose, muscle or joint pain, visual disturbances, conjunctivitis (pinkeye), ringing in the ears, fainting, depression, decreased sex drive or sexual function, tingling in the hands or feet, nervousness, tiredness, anxiety, sleeplessness, poor muscle coordination, muscle stiffness, poor bladder control, frequent urination, itching, rash, sweating, fluid retention, facial swelling and flushing, and back, neck, shoulder, arm, or leg pain.
✓ Rare: vomiting, dry mouth, sinus irritation, bronchitis, cold or flu symptoms, worsening of asthma, coughing, hair loss, weight gain, and fever. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
Drug Interactions
• Doxazosin may interact with beta blockers to ‘increase the risk of dizziness or fa:kv%1)g alter the first dose of doxazosin.
• TW-1 UDOd-pressure-lowering effect of doxazosin may be reduced by indomethacin.
• When taken with other blood-pressure-lowering drugs, dox-
azosin produces a severe reduction of blood pressure.
• The blood-pressure-lowering effect of clonidine may be reduced by doxazosin.
Doxazosin should be taken with caution in combination with clarithromycin, ketoconazole, and itraconazole.
Food Interactions None known.
Usual Dose
Adult: 1 mg morning or evening to start; may be increased to a total of 16 mg, taken once a day. Extended-release tablets-4 mg once daily at breakfast; may be increased to a total of 8 mg. Do not chew, cut, or crush extended-release tablets.
Child: not recommended.
Overdosage
Overdose may produce drowsiness, poor reflexes, and very low blood pressure. Overdose victims should be taken to a hospital emergency room at once. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Take doxazosin exactly as prescribed. Do not stop taking it unless directed to do so by your doctor. Avoid over-the-counter drugs that contain stimulants because they may increase your blood pressure.
Doxazosin may cause dizziness, headache, and drowsiness, especially 2-6 hours after you take your first dose, although these effects can persist after the first few doses. Use caution when getting up from a sitting or lying position.
Call your doctor if you develop severe dizziness, heart palpitations, or any bothersome or persistent side effect.
Wait 12-24 hours after taking your first dose of doxazosin before driving or doing anything that requires concentration. Take your dose at bedtime to minimize this problem.
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 coT)- tinue with your regular schedule. Do R(ak%’Ke a double dose.
4VIWIal Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: The safety of using doxazosin during pregnancy is not known, although animal studies have shown that alpha blockers may affect fetal development. When this drug is considered crucial by your doctor, its potential benefits must be carefully weighed against its risks.
Small amounts of doxazosin pass into breast milk. Nursing mothers who must take this drug should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors, especially those with liver disease, may be more sensitive to the effects and side effects of doxazosin.
Generic Name
Doxercalciferol (dox-er-kal-Sffl-fer-ahl)
Brand Names
Drisdol Liquid Hectorol Capsules
Type of Drug
Vitamin D supplement.
Prescribed For
Elevated parathyroid hormone levels in patients undergoing kidney dialysis.
General Information
Doxercalciferol is a synthetic form of vitamin D that is processed in the body to form active vitamin D. Vitamin D, along with parathyroid hormone, are key elements of the calcium-regulating system in the body. Normally, your body releases parathyroid hormone if blood calcium levels are too low. Parathyroid hormones move calcium from the place where it is found in greatest quantity—your bones—into the bloodstream. This can have disastrous effects for a wide variety of body functions where calcium is crucial including muscle contraction, nervous system function, bone fragility, and blood clotting. Doxercalciferol helps to stabilize the system and normalize parathyroid hormone levels that can be artificially elevated in dialysis patients.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not use doxercalciferol if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients.
Do not take any other Vitamin D supplement while taking this dwg.
People with a tendency toward high calcium or vitamin D levels should not take doxercalciferol.
Before taking this medication, tell your doctor if you have liver disease. You may not be able to take doxercalciferol, or you may require a dosage adjustment or special monitoring during treatment.
Dialysis patients experience increases in blood calcium and phosphate while taking this drug.
Drug Interactions
• Do not take antacids that contain magnesium while you are taking doxercalciferol.
• Cholestyramine may reduce the absorption of doxercalciferol.
• Prolonged use of mineral oil may reduce the absorption of doxercalciferol.
• Do not combine any other over-the-counter or prescription medicines, or vitamin supplements with doxercalciferol without first talking with your doctor.
• The following medicines can slow the transformation of doxercalciferol to its active form in the body, reducing its effectiveness: ketoconazole, erythromycin, delaviridine, indinavir, nelfinavir, ritonavir, amiodarone, aprepitant, chloramphenicol, cimetidine, ciprofloxacin, clarithromycin, diltiazem, fluconazole, fluvoxamine, gestodene, itraconazole, mifepristone, nefazodone, norfloxacin, mibefradil, and verapamil.
• The following drugs can increase the breakdown of doxercalciferol in the liver, possibly reducing its effectiveness: efavirenz, nevirapine, barbiturates, carbamazepine, glucocorticoids, modafinil, phenobarbital, phenytoin, rifampin, St. John’s wort, oxcarbazepine, pioglitazone, and rifabutin. Dosage adjustment may be needed.
• Digoxin may cause symptoms of alcohol intolerance when combined with disulfiram or mettot)idazole.
Food (”WTactions
Avoid grapefruit products as they can slow the transformation of doxercalciferol to its active form in the body, reducing its effectiveness.
You may need to limit your consumption of foods containing vitamin D. Consult your doctor.
constipation, general discomfort, nausea, difficulty breathing, and itching.
of appetite, indigestion, weight gain, on, sleepiness, and slowed heart rate.
Possible Side Effects
♦ Common: swelling, headache, dizziness,
✓ Less common: loss joint pain,
Usual Dose
Adult:starting dose-10 mcg 3 times a week during kidney dialysis treatment. Dosage may be adjusted to 2.5 mcg at 8-week in-
tervals if necessary.
Child: not recommended.
Overdosage
Symptoms include weakness, headache, drowsiness, nausea, vomiting, dry mouth, metallic taste in mouth, constipation, muscle pain, bone pain, and irregular heartbeat. Call your local poison control center or a hospital emergency room for more information. It you seek treatment, ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Compliance with dosage instruction, diet, and calcium supplementation is important while taking doxercalciferol.
Lab tests are required to monitor therapy while taking doxercalciferol.
Doxercalciferol may cause dizziness. Use caution while driving or performing other tasks requiring alertness, coordination, or physical dexterity.
Special Populations
Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you are pregnant, planning on becoming pregnant, or breast-feeding.
The safety of using doxercalciferol 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 doxercalciferol passes into breast milk. Nursing mothers who must use this drug should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors may use this drug without special precaution.
Generic Name
Dronabinol (droe-Mla-ih,bl)
Brand Name Marino)
Type of Drug Antinauseant.
Prescribed For
Nausea and vomiting associated with cancer chemotherapy, and appetite stimulation and weight-loss prevention in people with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
General Information
Dronabinol is a legal form of marijuana. The psychoactive chemical in marijuana is delta-9-THC. Dronabinol has all of the psychological effects of marijuana and is therefore considered to be a highly abusable drug. It can cause personality changes, feelings of detachment, hallucinations, and euphoria (feeling “high”). Younger adults have reported a greater success rate with dronabinol, probably because they are better able to tolerate these effects.
Most people start taking dronabinol while in the hospital so their response to the drug and its possible adverse effects can be monitored. Dronabinol has also been studied as a glaucoma treatment.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take dronabinol if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients, to marijuana, or to sesame oil.
Dronabinol should not be used to treat nausea and vomiting caused by anything other than cancer chemotherapy.
Dronabinol should be used with caution in those with a history of seizure disorders or substance abuse.
Dronabinol has a profound effect on mental states; it will impair your ability to operate complex equipment or engage in any activity that requires intense concentration, sound judgment, or coordination—such as driving a car.
Dronabinol produces withdrawal symptoms when the drug is stopped. These may develop within 12 hours of the drug’s discontinuation and include restlessness, sleeplessness, and irritability. Within a day after the drug has been stopped, stuffy nose, hot flashes, sweating, loose stools, hiccups, or appetite loss may occur. The symptoms usually subside within a few days,
Dronabinol should be used with caution by people with heart disease or high blood pressure. Dronabinol should be used with caution by people with a manic-depressive or schizophrenic history because it may aggravate the underlying disease.
Possible Side Effects
V Most common: drowsiness, euphoria, dizziness, anxiety, muddled thinking, perceptual difficulties, poor coordination, irritability, a separation in time and space, depression, weakness, sluggishness, nausea and vomiting, headache, hallucinations, memory lapses, loss of muscle coordination, unsteadiness, paranoia, depersonalization, disorientation, confusion, rapid heartbeat, and dizziness when rising from a sitting or lying position.
♦ Less common: difficulty talking or slurred speech, facial flushing, excessive perspiration, nightmares, ringing or buzzing in the ears, fainting, diarrhea, loss of bowel control, and muscle pain.
Drug Interactions
• Dronabinol increases the effects of alcohol, sleeping pills, sedatives, and other depressants. It also enhances the effects of psychoactive drugs including tricyclic antidepressants, amphetamines, cocaine, and other stimulants.
• Dronabinol may increase the effects of fluoxetine and disulfiram.
• The effects of theophylline drugs are reduced by dronabinol.
• Combining dronabinol and antihistamines or anticholinergic drugs may cause either rapid heartbeat or excessive drowsiness.
Food Interactions
This drug may be taken without regard to food or meals; as an appetite stimulant, it is often taken before meals.
Usual Dose
Antiemetic: 5 mg 1-3 hours before starting chemotherapy treatment and repeated every 2-4 hours after treatment, for a total of 4-6 doses a day. Dosage may be increased up to 15 mg per dose if needed; psychiatric side effects increase greatly at higher dosages.
Appetite Stimulant: 2.5 mg before lunch or dinner, or 2.5 mg at bedtime. Dosage may be increased to 20 mg a day.
Overdosage
Overdose symptoms may occur at usual dosages or at higher dosages if the drug is being abused. The primary symptoms of
overdose are the psychological symptoms listed above (see “Possible Side Effects”). In some cases, overdose may lead to panic reactions or seizure. Contact a hospital or local poison center for more information. If you seek treatment, ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Be careful when driving or performing any task that requires concentration. Avoid alcohol and other central nervous system (CNS) depressants.
Dronabinol may cause acute psychiatric or psychological side effects. Call your doctor if any develop.
The capsules must be stored in the refrigerator.
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.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding; Animal studies have shown adverse effects on the fetus. When this drug is considered crucial by your doctor, its benefits must be carefully weighed against its risks.
Dronabinol passes into breast milk. Nursing mothers who must take this drug should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors may be more sensitive to this drug, especially its psychological effects.
Brand Name
Dyazide
Generic Ingredients Hydrochlorothiazide + Triamterene 5§1
Other Brand Names
Maxzide Maxzide-25
The information in this 10TOVile also applies to the following drugs:
Generic Ingredients: Amiloride + Hydrochlorothiazide 92 Hydro-Ride Moduretic
Generic Ingredients: Spironolactone + Hydrochlorothiazide KI
Aldactazide Spironazide
Alzide Novo-Spirozine Spirozide
Type of Drug
Diuretic that increases urination).
Prescribed For Hypertension (high blood pressure) or any condition where it is de-
sirable to eliminate excess water from the body. General Information
Dyazide combines a thiazide diuretic and a potassium-sparing diuretic. The latter, triamterene, helps the body retain potassium while producing a diuretic effect. This balances the other ingredient, hydrochlorothiazide, which normally causes a loss of potas- sium. Different products contain differing concentrations of these 2 drugs. Dyazide should be used only when you need its exact proportion of ingredients, and should not be used for initial therapy of hypertension or edema. It may be used alone or with other anti hypertensive drugs such as beta blockers. Dosage adjustment may be necessary.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not use dyazide if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients or to any sulfa drug or if you have a history of allergy.
Do not use Dyazide if you have nonfunctioning kidneys, bronchial asthma, or hyperkalemia (high blood potassium levels).
Do not combine any potassium supplement and Dyazide without your doctor’s knowledge. Dyazide may reduce blood levels of sodium and potassium and raise blood calcium levels.
Dyazide should be used with caution in people with diabetes, liver disease, or an electrolyte imbalance.
Possible Side Effects
♦ Most common: appetite loss, drowsiness, lethargy, head-
ache, gastrointestinal upset, cramping, and diarrhea.
V Less common: rash—possibly severe, mental confusion, fever, feeling unwell, impotence, bright red tongue, burnt”g sensation in the tongue, tingling in the toes and fingers, restlessness, anemia or other effects on blood components, increased sensitivity to sunlight, and dizziness when rising quickly from a sitting position. Dyazide may also produce muscle spasms, gout, weakness, and blurred vision.
Drug Interactions
other blood pressure
• Dyazide increases the effect of
drugs. This is why other blood-pressure drugs are often prescribed with Dyazide, but dosage adjustments may be required.
• Combining Dyazide and digitalis drugs, amphotericin B, or adrenal corticosteroids increases the risk of body-fluid imbalance. If you are taking insulin or an oral antidiabetic drug and begin taking Dyazide, the insulin or antidiabetic dosage may have to be modified.
• Dyazide may increase the risk of allopurinol side effects.
• Dyazide may decrease the effects of oral anticoagulant (blood-thinning) drugs.
• Antigout drug dosage may have to be modified since Dyazide raises uric-acid levels.
• Dyazide may prolong the effects of chemotherapy drugs on reducing white-blood-cell counts.
• Dyazide may increase the effects of diazoxide, which may lead to symptoms of diabetes.
• Dyazide should not be taken with loop diuretics because the combination can lead to an extreme diuretic effect and an extreme effect on blood-sodium levels.
• Dyazide may increase the effect of vitamin D, which may cause high blood-calcium levels.
• Propantheline and other anticholinergics may increase the diuretic effect of Dyazide.
• Lithium carbonate taken with Dyazide should be monitored carefully by a doctor due to an increased risk of lithium side effects.
• Cholestyramine and colestipol prevent Dyazide from being absorbed. Dyazide should be taken at least 2 hours before cholestyramine or colestipol.
• Methenamine and other urinary agents may reduce the effect of Dyazide.
• Some nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSNDs), particularly indomethacin, may reduce the effect of Dyazide. Sulindac, another NSAID, may increase its effect.
• Potassium-sparing diuretics should be used with caution in combination with ACE inhibitors.
Food Interactions
Take this drug with food if it upsets your stomach.
usual Dose
Adult
Amiloride combination: 1-2 tablets daily with meals.
Spironolactone combination: 1-8 tablets daily.
Triamterene combination: 1-2 capsules or tablets a day. Child: not recommended.
Overdosage
Symptoms may include tingling in the arms or legs, weakness, fatigue, changes in heartbeat, a sickly feeling, dry mouth, restlessness, muscle pain or cramps, urinary difficulties, nausea, and vomiting. In some cases, low blood pressure and decreased respiration may occur. Take the victim to a hospital emergency room immediately. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Dyazide causes excess urination at first, but this subsides after several weeks of use. Diuretics are usually taken early in the day to prevent excessive nighttime urination that may interfere with sleep.
Dyazide may make you drowsy. Be careful when driving or performing any task that requires concentration.
Call your doctor if you develop muscle pain, sudden joint pain, weakness, cramps, nausea, vomiting, restlessness, excessive thirst, tiredness, drowsiness, increased heart or pulse rate, diarrhea, dizziness, headache, or rash.
People with diabetes may experience an increased blood-sugar level and require dosage adjustments of their antidiabetic medications.
Avoid other drugs while taking Dyazide unless otherwise directed by your doctor. Avoid alcohol.
If you are taking Dyazide for the treatment of hypertension or congestive heart failure (CHF), avoid over-the-counter cough, cold, or allergy medications, which may contain Ft%m\)%an1s.
Take Dyazide exactly -as prescribed. Be aware that all triarRtt~tl)Z-’hydrochlorothiazide products are not equal to each other and should not be freely substituted. Check with your doctor and pharmacist before switching brands.
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. Do not take a double dose.
