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Nifedipine Medication Summary

No separate FDA Medication Guide was found for this label. This summary is based on FDA/DailyMed prescribing information.

This patient-friendly summary is based on FDA/DailyMed prescribing information. It is not a substitute for medical advice. Not every medication has a separate FDA Medication Guide.

What is this medication?

Nifedipine is described in FDA/DailyMed prescribing information. No separate FDA Medication Guide was found for this label. This summary is based on FDA/DailyMed prescribing information.

What is this medication used for?

I. Vasospastic Angina Nifedipine is indicated for the management of vasospastic angina confirmed by any of the following criteria: 1) classical pattern of angina at rest accompanied by ST segment elevation, 2) angina or coronary artery spasm provoked by ergonovine, or 3) angiographically demonstrated coronary artery spasm. In those patients who have had angiography, the presence of significant fixed obstructive disease is not incompatible with the diagnosis of vasospastic angina, provided that the above criteria are satisfied. Nifedipine may also be used where the clinical presentation suggests a possible vasospastic component but where vasospasm has not been confirmed, e.g., where pain has.

What should I know before taking it?

Known hypersensitivity reaction to nifedipine.

What important warnings are listed?

Excessive Hypotension Although, in most patients, the hypotensive effect of nifedipine is modest and well tolerated, occasional patients have had excessive and poorly tolerated hypotension. These responses have usually occurred during initial titration or at the time of subsequent upward dosage adjustment. Although patients have rarely experienced excessive hypotension on nifedipine alone, this may be more common in patients on concomitant beta blocker therapy. Although not approved for this purpose, nifedipine capsules have been used (orally and sublingually) for acute reduction of blood pressure. Several well-documented reports describe cases of profound hypotension, myocardial.

How is this medication usually taken?

The dosage of nifedipine needed to suppress angina and that can be tolerated by the patient must be established by titration. Excessive doses can result in hypotension. Therapy should be initiated with the 10 mg capsule. The starting dose is one 10 mg capsule, swallowed whole, 3 times/day. The usual effective dose range is 10 to 20 mg three times daily. Some patients, especially those with evidence of coronary artery spasm, respond only to higher doses, more frequent administration, or both. In such patients, doses of 20 to 30 mg three or four times daily may be effective. Doses above 120 mg daily are rarely necessary. More than 180 mg per day is not recommended. In most cases, nifedipine.

What side effects are listed?

In multiple-dose United States and foreign controlled studies in which adverse reactions were reported spontaneously, adverse effects were frequent but generally not serious and rarely required discontinuation of therapy or dosage adjustment. Most were expected consequences of the vasodilator effects of nifedipine. Adverse Effect Nifedipine (%) (N=226) Placebo (%) (N=235) Dizziness, lightheadedness, giddiness 27 15 Flushing, heat sensation 25 8 Headache 23 20 Weakness 12 10 Nausea, heartburn 11 8 Muscle cramps, tremor 8 3 Peripheral edema 7 1 Nervousness, mood changes 7 4 Palpitation 7 5 Dyspnea, cough, wheezing 6 3 Nasal congestion, sore throat 6 8 There is also a large uncontrolled.

What interactions are listed?

The FDA/DailyMed label should be reviewed for complete details.

Where can I find the official prescribing information?

Review the full prescribing information on DailyMed: https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed/drugInfo.cfm?setid=5014847e-389d-48c1-8350-b9b24ca8d2a4

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Source: DailyMed prescribing information ↗

⚠️ Disclaimer

This summary is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult your doctor, pharmacist, or other licensed healthcare professional before starting, stopping, or changing any medicine. Read full medical disclaimer.