1. Dilantin
Dilantin is an antiepileptic drug, prescribed to control grand mal seizures (a type of seizure in which the individual experiences a sudden loss of consciousness immediately followed by generalized convulsions) and temporal lobe seizures (a type of seizure caused by disease in the cortex of the temporal [side] lobe of the brain affecting smell, taste, sight, hearing, memory, and movement). Dilantin may also be used to prevent and treat seizures occurring during and after neurosurgery (surgery of the brain and spinal cord). Children over 6 years of age and adolescents may need the minimum adult dose (300 milligrams per day). If you have ever had an allergic reaction to or are sensitive to phenytoin or similar epilepsy medications such as Peganone or Mesantoin, do not take Dilantin.
2. Amaryl
Amaryl is an oral medication used to treat type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes when diet and exercise alone fail to control abnormally high levels of blood sugar. Like other diabetes drugs classified as sulfonylureas, Amaryl lowers blood sugar by stimulating the pancreas to produce more insulin. You should not take Amaryl while nursing. Ask your pharmacist any questions you have about this medication, especially if it is new to you.
3. Gliclazide
Type of medicine: Antidiabetic. Used for: Non insulin-dependent diabetes (type 2) in adults. Hypoglycaemia is when your blood sugar falls, causing you to feel irritable, weak, have blurred vision, look pale, and tremble. Feeling or being sick: Eat little and often.
4. Trileptal
Trileptal helps reduce the frequency of partial epileptic seizures, a form of epilepsy in which neural disturbances are limited to a specific region of the brain and the victim remains conscious throughout the attack. Trileptal may be prescribed by itself to treat the problem in adults. Turn the bottle upright and twist the syringe free from the plastic adapter. The usual starting dose is 300 milligrams twice daily.
5. Glucotrol
Glucotrol is an oral antidiabetic medication used to treat type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes. In diabetics either the body does not make enough insulin or the insulin that is produced no longer works properly. It is important to recognize your own symptoms of low blood sugar so that you can treat them quickly. GLIPIZIDE (Glucotrol®) helps to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus.
6. Lyrica
Treating fibromyalgia or nerve pain caused by certain conditions (eg, shingles, diabetic nerve problems). It is also used in combination with other medicines to treat certain types of seizures. Your pharmacist has information about pregabalin written for health professionals that you may read. If you are taking pregabalin to prevent seizures, keep taking the medication even if you feel fine.
7. Oxcarbazepine
Trileptal helps reduce the frequency of partial epileptic seizures, a form of epilepsy in which neural disturbances are limited to a specific region of the brain and the victim remains conscious throughout the attack. Trileptal may be prescribed by itself to treat the problem in adults. The usual dose ranges from 300 to 1,050 milligrams taken twice daily. Trileptal should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefits justify the risk.
8. Topiramate
Topamax is an antiepileptic drug, prescribed to control both the mild attacks known as partial seizures and the severe tonic-clonic convulsions known as grand mal seizures. It is typically added to the treatment regimen when other drugs fail to fully control a patient's attacks. Your doctor will need to reduce the dose you are taking gradually. More common side effects may include: Abdominal pain, abnormal coordination, abnormal vision, agitation, anxiety, appetite loss, back pain, breast pain, chest pain, confusion, constipation, depression, difficulty with concentration, difficulty with memory, dizziness, double vision, drowsiness, fatigue, flu-like symptoms, indigestion, language problems, leg pain, loss of coordination, menstrual problems, mood problems, nausea, nervousness, nose inflammation, rash, sinusitis, slowing of movements, sore throat, speech problems, tingling or burning sensations, tremors, weakness, weight loss.
9. Accupril
QUINAPRIL (Accupril®) is an antihypertensive (blood pressure lowering agent) known as an ACE inhibitor. Quinapril controls high blood pressure (hypertension) by relaxing blood vessels; it is not a cure. You may need to stop using the medicine for a short time. If you have questions about the medicine you are taking or would like more information, check with your doctor, pharmacist, or other health care provider.
10. Actos
Pioglitazone is an oral diabetes medicine that help control blood sugar levels. Pioglitazone is for people with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes. Store at room temperature in a tight container, away from moisture and humidity. PIOGLITAZONE (Actos) helps to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus.
11. Quinapril
Quinapril belongs in a class of drugs called angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors. ACE inhibitors are used for treating high blood pressure and heart failure and for preventing kidney failure due to hypertension and diabetes. The side effects listed above may not include all of the side effects reported by the drug's manufacturer. Quinapril should be used with extreme caution in CHILDREN; safety and effectiveness in children have not been confirmed.
12. Rosiglitazone
Rosiglitazone is an oral diabetes medicine that help control blood sugar levels. Rosiglitazone is for people with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes. Learn how to monitor blood or urine sugar and urine ketones regularly. sneezing, runny nose, cough or other signs of a cold;.
13. Tolbutamide
Orinase is an oral antidiabetic medication used to treat type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes. Diabetes occurs when the body does not make enough insulin, or when the insulin that is produced no longer works properly. Insulin is made naturally in the pancreas. Ask your doctor what you should do if you experience mild hypoglycemia.
14. Pioglitazone
Pioglitazone is an oral diabetes medicine that help control blood sugar levels. Pioglitazone is for people with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes. Gemfibrozil, insulin, or oral antidiabetic medicines (eg, glipizide) because the risk of low blood sugar may be increased. Actos (and the similar drug Avandia) can be used alone or in combination with insulin injections or other oral diabetes medications such as DiaBeta, Micronase, Glucotrol, or Glucophage.
15. Glucophage
METFORMIN (Glucophage®) is a medicine used to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus. Treatment is combined with a balanced diet and exercise. If you have any questions about Glucophage , please talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or other health care provider. You may be more likely to have hyperglycemia (high blood sugar) if you are taking metformin with other drugs that raise blood sugar.
16. Nateglinide
Starlix combats high blood sugar levels in people with type 2 diabetes (the kind that does not require insulin shots). Insulin speeds the transfer of sugar from the bloodstream to the body's cells, where it's burned to produce energy. This may occur because of either a diminished responsiveness to the medication or a worsening of the diabetes. Speak with your doctor if any of the following symptoms continue or become troublesome.
17. Starlix
Starlix combats high blood sugar levels in people with type 2 diabetes (the kind that does not require insulin shots). Insulin speeds the transfer of sugar from the bloodstream to the body's cells, where it's burned to produce energy. Also be careful when having a liquid meal; it could reduce the effectiveness of the drug. Store at room temperature in a tightly closed container.
18. Repaglinide
Repaglinide is an oral medication for lowering blood sugar ( glucose ) in diabetics. It is in a class of drugs for treating diabetes type 2 called meglitinides and is chemically unlike other anti-diabetic medication. Repaglinide increases the amount of insulin released from the pancreas, which helps to control blood sugar. Such drugs include amphetamines, glucorticoids such as prednisone , estrogens , isoniazid, phenothiazines such as chlorpromazine (Thorazine), phenytoin (Dilantin), decongestants, and thyroid drugs.
19. Glibenclamide
Fluvastatin is a cholesterol-lowering medication that blocks the production of cholesterol (a type of fat) in the body. Fluvastatin reduces low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and total cholesterol in the blood. Copyright 1996-2006 Cerner Multum, Inc. The absence of a warning for a given drug or drug combination in no way should be construed to indicate that the drug or drug combination is safe, effective or appropriate for any given patient.
20. Glimepiride
Amaryl tablets contain the active ingredient glimepiride, which is a type of medicine called a sulphonylurea. (NB. Birth control pills, certain medicines that act on the liver (eg, phenytoin, rifampin, and others), diazoxide, diuretics (eg, hydrochlorothiazide), corticosteroids (eg, prednisone), estrogens (eg, estradiol), gemfibrozil, isoniazid, nicotinic acid, phenothiazines (eg, chlorpromazine), or certain stimulants (eg, albuterol, amphetamine, pseudoephedrine) because the effectiveness of Glimepiride may be decreased. On rare occasions, low blood sugar (hypoglycaemia) can occur as a side effect of this medicine.
21. Phenytoin
Dilantin is an antiepileptic drug, prescribed to control grand mal seizures (a type of seizure in which the individual experiences a sudden loss of consciousness immediately followed by generalized convulsions) and temporal lobe seizures (a type of seizure caused by disease in the cortex of the temporal [side] lobe of the brain affecting smell, taste, sight, hearing, memory, and movement). Dilantin may also be used to prevent and treat seizures occurring during and after neurosurgery (surgery of the brain and spinal cord). If your seizures are controlled on 100-milligram Dilantin capsules 3 times daily, your doctor may allow you to take the entire 300 milligrams as a single dose once daily. Before taking phenytoin make sure your doctor or pharmacist knows: if you are pregnant, trying for a baby, or breast-feeding if you suffer from heart or liver problems if you suffer from porphyria (a blood disorder) if you have ever had an allergic reaction to this or any other medicine if you are taking any other medicines, including those available to buy without a prescription, herbal and complementary medicines.
22. Acarbose
Precose is an oral medication used to treat type 2 (noninsulin-dependent) diabetes when high blood sugar levels cannot be controlled by diet alone. Precose works by slowing the body's digestion of carbohydrates so that blood sugar levels won't surge upward after a meal. if you are pregnant, plan to become pregnant, or are breast-feeding. It is not known whether Precose appears in breast milk.
23. Orinase
Orinase is an oral antidiabetic medication used to treat type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes. Diabetes occurs when the body does not make enough insulin, or when the insulin that is produced no longer works properly. You should not take Orinase if you have had an allergic reaction to it. This notwithstanding, beta-blockers have been used successfully in diabetic patients and have been associated with improved survival in diabetics with high blood pressure.
24. Glynase
Micronase is an oral antidiabetic medication used to treat type 2 diabetes, the kind that occurs when the body either does not make enough insulin or fails to use insulin properly. Insulin transfers sugar from the bloodstream to the body's cells, where it is then used for energy. Maintenance therapy usually ranges from 1.25 to 20 milligrams daily. Failure to follow a sound diet and exercise plan can lead to serious complications, such as dangerously high or low blood sugar levels.
25. Prandin
Prandin tablets contain the active ingredient repaglinide, which is a medicine used to help control blood sugar levels in people with type 2 or non-insulin dependent diabetes (NIDDM). People with diabetes have a deficiency or absence of a hormone produced by the pancreas called insulin. if you have a history of acidosis, kidney disease, or liver disease. However, if you're already taking both drugs, the doctor will monitor your blood sugar levels closely and adjust the dosages as needed.
26. Glyburide
Micronase is an oral antidiabetic medication used to treat type 2 diabetes, the kind that occurs when the body either does not make enough insulin or fails to use insulin properly. Insulin transfers sugar from the bloodstream to the body's cells, where it is then used for energy. Always remember that Micronase is an aid to, not a substitute for, good diet and exercise. Multum's drug information does not endorse drugs, diagnose patients or recommend therapy.
27. Precose
ACARBOSE (Precose ® ) lowers blood sugar in patients with diabetes. It slows the entry of certain sugars from food in the intestine into the body. If you are taking Precose along with other diabetes medications, be sure to have some source of glucose, such as Glutose tablets, available in case you experience any symptoms of mild or moderate low blood sugar. If this happens to you, your doctor may recommend that Precose be discontinued temporarily and injected insulin used instead.
28. Glucovance
GLYBURIDE; METFORMIN (Glucovance®) helps to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus. Treatment is combined with a balanced diet and exercise. you will be having surgery or certain lab procedures. Take the missed dose as soon as you remember (be sure to take the medicine with food).
29. Avandia
Rosiglitazone is an oral diabetes medicine that help control blood sugar levels. Rosiglitazone is for people with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes. Check with your health care professional before stopping or starting any of your medicines. Make sure the doctor is aware of any heart problems you may have.
30. Topamax
Topamax is an antiepileptic drug, prescribed to control both the mild attacks known as partial seizures and the severe tonic-clonic convulsions known as grand mal seizures. It is typically added to the treatment regimen when other drugs fail to fully control a patient's attacks. Any medication taken in excess can have serious consequences. Topamax is also prescribed for the prevention of migraine headaches (also known as prophylactic treatment).
31. Pregabalin
Treating fibromyalgia or nerve pain caused by certain conditions (eg, shingles, diabetic nerve problems). It is also used in combination with other medicines to treat certain types of seizures. Take Pregabalin by mouth with or without food. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the missed dose and go back to your regular dosing schedule.
32. Glipizide
Treating patients with type 2 diabetes who cannot control blood sugar levels by diet and exercise alone. It may be used alone or with other antidiabetic medicines. It's possible that drugs such as Glucotrol may lead to more heart problems than diet treatment alone, or diet plus insulin. Also, if you have any stomach or intestinal disease, Glucotrol XL may not work as well.
33. Metformin
METFORMIN (Glucophage®) is a medicine used to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus. Treatment is combined with a balanced diet and exercise. you are 80 years old or older and have not had a kidney function test. Heavy drinking increases the danger of lactic acidosis and can also trigger an attack of low blood sugar.
