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Drug Details
ANTEPSIN tablets
- Drug Class Description
Cytoprotectants. - Generic Name
Sucralfate - Presentation
Tablet Biconvex, oblong, white tablets with a dividing score on one side. - Description
Each tablet contains 1 gram of sucralfate. - Indications
Treatment of duodenal ulcer, gastric ulcer, chronic gastritis. - Adult Dosage
For oral administration.
Duodenal ulcer, gastric ulcer, chronic gastritis:
Adults: The usual dose is 2 grams twice daily to be taken on rising and at bedtime, or 1 gram 4 times a day to be taken 1 hour before meals and at bedtime. Maximum daily dose: 8 grams. For ease of administration, Antepsin Tablets may be dispersed in 10-15 mL of water. Four to six weeks' treatment is usually needed for ulcer healing, but up to twelve weeks may be necessary in resistant cases.
Antacids may be used as required for relief of pain, but should not be taken half an hour before or after Antepsin
- Child Dosage
Safety and effectiveness in children has not been established.
- Elderly Dosage
There are no special dosage requirements for elderly patients but, as with all medicines, the lowest effective dose should be used.
- Contra Indications
Contraindicated in individuals who are hypersensitive to any of the ingredients of Antepsin.
- Special Precautions
The product should only be used with caution in patients with renal dysfunction, due to the possibility of increased aluminium absorption. In patients with severe renal impairment or on dialysis, Antepsin should be used with extreme caution and only for short-term treatment. The concomitant use of other aluminium containing medications is not recommended in view of the enhanced potential for aluminium absorption and toxicity.
Bezoars (an insoluble mass formed within the gastric lumen) have been reported occasionally in patients taking Antepsin Suspension. The majority of these patients had underlying conditions that may predispose to bezoar formation such as delayed gastric emptying, or were receiving concomitant enteral feeding (see under Interactions). Bezoars have been reported after administration of Antepsin Suspension to severely ill patients in ITU, especially in premature infants in whom the use of sucralfate is not recommended.
- Interactions
Concomitant administration of Antepsin may reduce the bioavailability of certain drugs including tetracycline, ciprofloxacin, norfloxacin, ketoconazole, digoxin, warfarin, phenytoin, theophylline, thyroxine, quinidine and H2 antagonists. The bioavailability of these agents may be restored by separating the administration of these agents from Antepsin by two hours. This interaction appears to be non systemic in origin presumably resulting from these agents being bound by Antepsin in the gastrointestinal tract. Because of the potential of Antepsin to alter the absorption of some drugs from the gastrointestinal tract, the separate administration of Antepsin from that of other agents should be considered when alterations in bioavailability are felt to be critical for concomitantly administered drugs.
The administration of Antepsin Tablets 1 g and enteral feeds by nasogastric tube should be separated by one hour in patients receiving Antepsin Tablets 1 g for the prophylaxis of stress ulceration. In rare cases bezoar formation has been reported when Antepsin and enteral feeds have been given too closely together.
- Adverse Drug Reactions
Adverse reactions to Antepsin in clinical trials were minor and only rarely led to discontinuation of the drug. Adverse events seen during use of Antepsin have included constipation, diarrhoea, nausea, vomiting, gastric discomfort, indigestion, flatulence, dry mouth, rash, back pain, dizziness, headache, vertigo, drowsiness and hypersensitivity reactions including pruritus, oedema, urticaria and shortness of breath.