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      • KENACIN TAB
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      • KINZOLIN TAB
      • KINZOLE CAPSULES 20 MG
      • KINCEF 1g INJECTION
      • KINCEF 1.5g INJECTION
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+234 803 4946 900


  • Home
  • Gallery
  • Products
    • KENACIN TAB
    • BEETHER INJECTION
    • CHYMOK TAB
    • KINBREX CAP
    • NEWMULT CAP
    • OFLODAZOLE CAP
    • KINVOX-500 & KINVOX-750
    • KINTHOMOL TAB
    • KINRATN TABLETS BP 2mg
    • KINOTEM TAB & SUSPENSION
    • KINZOCAP 200MG TAB
    • KINOMAL 80/480 TAB
    • ZADOL TAB
    • ZADOL FORTE TAB
    • KINZOLIN TAB
    • KINZOLE CAPSULES 20 MG
    • KINCEF 1g INJECTION
    • KINCEF 1.5g INJECTION
  • Wholesale & Distribution

KINRATYN TABLETS BP 2mg

Additional Information

composition

Each tablet contains 2.4mg salbutamol sulfate equivalent to 2mg salbutamol.

Excipients with known effect:

Each 2mg tablet contains:

- 60.05mg Lactose monohydrate

- Carmoisine (E122)

For the full list of excipients, see section 6.1


Clinical particulars

Therapeutic indications

Salbutamol Tablets are indicated in adults, adolescents and children aged 2 to 12 years.

1. For the relief of bronchospasm in bronchial asthmas of all types.

2. Chronic bronchitis.

3. Emphysema.


Method of administration

Adults:

The  usual effective dose is 4mg three or four times per day. If adequate  bronchodilation is not obtained each single dose may be gradually  increased to as much as 8mg. However, it has been established that some  patients obtain adequate relief with 2mg three or four times daily. In  elderly patients or in those known to be unusually sensitive to  beta-adrenergic stimulant drugs, it is advisable to initiate treatment  with 2mg three or four times per day.

Children:

The following doses should be administered three or four times daily.

2-6 years: 1-2mg

6-12 years: 2mg

Over 12 years: 2-4mg

The  product is not recommended for children under 2 years of age. The drug  is well tolerated by children so that, if necessary, these doses may be  cautiously increased.

Method of administration

For oral use.


Contraindications

Hypersensitivity to the active substance or any of the excipients listed in section 6.1.

Non-i.v. formulations of salbutamol must not be used to arrest uncomplicated premature labour or threatened abortion.

Special warnings and precautions for use

Bronchodilators  should not be the only or main treatment in patients with severe or  unstable asthma. Severe asthma requires regular medical assessment  including lung function testing as patients are at risk of severe  attacks and even death. Physicians should consider using oral  corticosteroid therapy and/or the maximum recommended dose of inhaled  corticosteroid in those patients.

Patients  should seek medical advice if treatment with salbutamol tablets becomes  less effective. The dosage or frequency of administration should only  be increased on medical advice.

Patients taking salbutamol tablets may also be receiving short-acting inhaled bronchodilators to relieve symptoms.

The  management of asthma should normally follow a stepwise programme, and  patient response should be monitored clinically and by lung function  tests.

Increasing use of  bronchodilators in particular short-acting inhaled beta2-agonists to  relieve symptoms indicates deterioration of asthma control. The patient  should be instructed to seek medical advice if short acting relief  bronchodilator treatment becomes less effective or they need more  inhalations than usual.

In this  situation patients should be reassessed and consideration given to the  need for increased anti-inflammatory therapy (e.g. higher doses of  inhaled corticosteroids or a course of oral corticosteroid). Severe  exacerbations of asthma must be treated in the normal way.

Patients  should be warned that if either the usual relief with salbutamol  tablets is diminished or the usual duration of action reduced, they  should not increase the dose or its frequency of administration, but  should seek medical advice.

Cardiovascular  effects may be seen with sympathomimetic drugs, including salbutamol.  There is some evidence from post-marketing data and published literature  of rare occurrences of myocardial ischaemia associated with salbutamol.  Patients with underlying severe heart disease (e.g. ischaemic heart  disease, arrhythmia or severe heart failure) who are receiving  salbutamol should be warned to seek medical advice if they experience  chest pain or other symptoms of worsening heart disease. Attention  should be paid to assessment of symptoms such as dyspnoea and chest  pain, as they may be of either respiratory or cardiac origin.

Salbutamol should be administered cautiously to patients suffering from thyrotoxicosis.

Potentially  serious hypokalaemia may result from beta-2 agonist therapy mainly from  parenteral and nebulized administration. Particular caution is advised  in acute severe asthma as this effect may be potentiated by hypoxia and  by concomitant treatment with xanthine derivatives, steroids and  diuretics. It is recommended that serum potassium levels are monitored  in such situations.

In common with  other β-adrenoceptor agonists, salbutamol can induce reversible  metabolic changes such as increased blood glucose levels. Diabetic  patients may be unable to compensate for the increase in blood glucose  and the development of ketoacidosis has been reported. Concurrent  administration of corticosteroids can exaggerate this effect.

Patients  with rare hereditary problems of galactose intolerance, total lactase  deficiency or glucose – galactose malabsorption should not take this  medicine.

Salbutamol tablets contain carmoisine (E122) which may cause allergic reactions.

This medicine contains less than 1 mmol sodium (23mg) per tablet, that is to say essentially 'sodium-free'.

Interaction with other medicinal products and other forms of interaction

Salbutamol tablets and non-selective beta-blocking drugs, such as propranolol, should not usually be prescribed together.

The  effects of salbutamol may be altered by tricyclic antidepressants (e.g.  clomipramine) and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (e.g. rasagiline,  selegiline, isocarboxazid, phenelzine, tranylcypromine).

Potassium depleting agents

Owing to the hypokalaemic effect of beta-agonists, concurrent administration of serum potassium

depleting  agents known to exacerbate the risk of hypokalaemia, such as diuretics  (e.g. bendroflumethiazide, indapamide, bumetanide, furosemide), digoxin,  methyl xanthines (e.g. aminophylline, theophylline) and corticosteroids  (e.g. betamethasone, prednisolone, triamcinolone), should be  administered cautiously after careful evaluation of the benefits and  risks with special regard to the increased risk of cardiac arrhythmias  arising as a result of hypokalaemia (see section 4.4).

There  is an increased risk of hypokalaemia if high doses of theophylline or  high doses of corticosteroids are given with higher doses of salbutamol.

Fertility, pregnancy and lactationPregnancyAdministration  of drugs during pregnancy should only be considered if the expected  benefit to the mother is greater than any possible risk to the foetus.As  with the majority of drugs, there is little published evidence of its  safety in the early stages of human pregnancy, but in animal studies  there was evidence of some harmful effects on the foetus at very high  dose levels.Breast- 

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feeding as salbutamol is probably secreted in breast milk its use in nursing mothers requires careful consideration.

It  is not known whether salbutamol has a harmful effect on the neonate,  and so its use should be restricted to situations where it is felt that  the expected benefit to the mother is likely to outweigh any potential  risk to the neonate.FertilityThere is no information on the effects of  salbutamol on human fertility. There were no adverse effects on  fertility in animals (see section 5.3).


Effects on ability to drive and use machines

None known.
 

OVERDOSAGE

The  most common signs and symptoms of overdose with salbutamol are  transient beta agonist pharmacologically mediated events, including  tachycardia, tremor, hyperactivity and metabolic effects including  hypokalaemia (see sections 4.4 and 4.8).Hypokalaemia may occur following  overdose with salbutamol. Serum potassium levels should be  monitored.Lactic acidosis has been reported in association with high  therapeutic doses as well as overdoses of short-acting beta-agonist  therapy, therefore monitoring for elevated serum lactate and consequent  metabolic acidosis (particularly if there is persistence or worsening of  tachypnea despite resolution of other signs of bronchospasm such as  wheezing) may be indicated in the setting of overdose.Nausea, vomiting  and hyperglycaemia have been reported, predominantly in children and  when salbutamol overdose has been taken via the oral route.Further  management should be as clinically indicated or as recommended by the  national poisons centre, where available.

 Pharmacological properties

Pharmacodynamic properties

Pharmacotherapeutic  group: Selective beta-2-adrenoreceptor agonists, ATC code:  R03CC02Salbutamol is a selective beta-2-adrenergic agonist. At  therapeutic doses it acts on the beta-2 adrenoceptors of bronchial  muscle providing short acting (4-6 hours) bronchodilation in reversible  airways obstruction.

Pharmacokinetic properties

AbsorptionAfter  oral administration, salbutamol is absorbed from the gastrointestinal  tract and undergoes considerable first-pass metabolism to the phenolic  sulfate. Both unchanged drug and conjugate are excreted primarily in the  urine. The bioavailability of orally administered salbutamol is about  50%.EliminationSalbutamol administered intravenously has a half-life of 4  to 6 hours and is cleared partly renally and partly by metabolism to  the inactive 4' -O-sulfate (phenolic sulfate) which is also excreted  primarily in the urine. The faeces are a minor route of excretion. The  majority of a dose of salbutamol given intravenously, orally or by  inhalation is excreted within 72 hours. Salbutamol is bound to plasma  proteins to the extent of 10%.

Preclinical safety data

In  common with other potent selective beta-2-agonists, salbutamol has been  shown to be teratogenic in mice when given subcutaneously. In a  reproductive study, 9.3% of foetuses were found to have cleft palate at  2.5mg/kg dose, 4 times the maximum human oral dose. In rats, treatment  at the levels of 0.5, 2.32, 10.75 and 50mg/kg/day orally throughout  pregnancy resulted in no significant foetal abnormalities. The only  toxic effect was an increase in neonatal mortality at the highest dose  level as the result of lack of maternal care. Reproductive studies in  the rabbit at doses of 50mg/kg/day orally (i.e. much higher than the  normal human dose) have shown foetuses with treatment related changes;  these included open eyelids (ablepharia), secondary palate clefts  (palatoschisis), changes in ossification of the frontal bones of the  cranium (cranioschisis) and limb flexure.In an oral fertility and  general reproductive performance study in rats at doses of 2 and 50  mg/kg/day, with the exception of a reduction in number of weanlings  surviving to day 21 post partum at 50 mg/kg/day, there were no adverse  effects on fertility, embryofetal development, litter size, birth weight  or growth rate. 

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Kingzy Pharmaceuticals Limited

 

Office:Corporate

 Marshall Investment House, 500 East West Road,

Near Omega House, Rumuodara 

Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria. 

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+234-803 494 6900 +234-805 901 3884 kiingzypharma@gmail.com,

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