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Dralserp (Generic Hydralazine)

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Why is this medication prescribed?

High blood pressure is treated with hydralazine. The drug hydralazine belongs to the vasodilators class of drugs. In order to facilitate easier blood flow throughout the body, it acts by relaxing the blood vessels.

High blood pressure is a common illness that, if left untreated, can harm the kidneys, brain, heart, blood vessels, and other organs. Heart disease, a heart attack, heart failure, a stroke, renal failure, eyesight loss, and other issues may result from damage to these organs. Making lifestyle modifications will help you control your blood pressure in addition to taking medication. These adjustments include quitting smoking, drinking alcohol in moderation, eating a diet low in fat and salt, keeping a healthy weight, and exercising for at least 30 minutes most days.

How should this medicine be used?

Hydralazine is available as an oral tablet. Usually, two to four doses per day are given. Hydralazine should be taken every day at roughly the same time. Ask your doctor or pharmacist to explain any instructions on your prescription label that you are unsure about following. Use hydralazine as prescribed by your doctor. Never take it in larger or less amounts or more frequently than directed by your doctor.

Although it doesn’t treat high blood pressure, hydralazine manages it. Even if you feel good, keep taking the hydralazine medication. Without consulting your doctor, do not discontinue taking hydralazine.

Other uses for this medicine

Moreover, hydralazine is used to treat heart failure and following heart valve replacement. Discuss the potential dangers of using this medicine for your illness with your doctor.

Ask your doctor or pharmacist for more details if you’re interested in using this drug for any other conditions.

What special precautions should I follow?

Before taking hydralazine,

  • If you have an allergy to hydralazine, aspirin, tartrazine (a yellow food dye found in some processed foods and drugs), any other medications, or any of the ingredients in hydralazine tablets, let your doctor and pharmacist know right away. Get a list of the components from your pharmacist.
  • Inform your doctor and pharmacist about any additional prescription and over-the-counter drugs, vitamins, and dietary supplements you are currently taking or intend to take. Mention indomethacin (Indocin, Tivorbex), metoprolol (Lopressor, Toprol-XL, in Dutoprol), and propranolol if you have any of these (Inderal LA, Innopran XL, in Inderide).
  • Inform your physician if you have ever suffered from a heart attack, have coronary artery disease, rheumatic heart disease, or any heart, kidney, or liver conditions.
  • Inform your doctor if you are expecting, intend to get pregnant, or are nursing a baby. Call your doctor if you become pregnant while taking hydralazine.
  • Inform your doctor or dentist that you are taking hydralazine if you are getting surgery, including dental surgery.
  • Inquire with your doctor if drinking is safe while taking hydralazine. The negative effects of hydralazine can be exacerbated by alcohol.Ask your doctor about the safe use of alcohol while you are taking hydralazine. Alcohol can make the side effects from hydralazine worse.

What special dietary instructions should I follow?

During meals or as a snack, take hydralazine.

Your doctor might advise a low-sodium or low-salt diet. Pay close attention to these guidelines.

What should I do if I forget a dose?

If you miss a dosage, take it as soon as you recall. If the next dose is soon due, skip the missed one and carry on with your regular dosing plan. To make up for a missing dose, do not take a second one.

What side effects can this medication cause?

Side effects from hydralazine are possible. If any of these symptoms are severe or do not go away, let your doctor know right once:

  • Flushing
  • Uneasy stomach
  • Vomiting
  • Reduced appetite
  • Diarrhoea
  • Constipation
  • Tearing up
  • Blocked nose
  • Rash

Certain adverse effects can be very harmful. Call your doctor right away if you have any of the following symptoms:

  • Fainting
  • Muscular or joint ache
  • Fever
  • Quick heartbeat
  • Chest ache
  • Swelling feet or ankles
  • Tingling or numbness in the feet or hands

You or your doctor can submit a report to the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting programme online or by phone if you have a serious side event (1-800-332-1088).

What should I know about storage and disposal of this medication?

Keep this medication out of the reach of children and tightly closed in the original container. Keep at room temperature, away from sources of extreme heat or moisture (not in the bathroom).

To make sure that pets, kids, and other people cannot take leftover pharmaceuticals, they should be disposed of in a specific manner. You shouldn’t flush this medication down the toilet, though. The best option to get rid of your medication is instead through a medication take-back programme. To find out about take-back initiatives in your neighbourhood, speak with your pharmacist or get in touch with your city’s waste/recycling department. If you do not have access to a take-back programme, you can find more information at the FDA’s Safe Disposal of Medications website (http://goo.gl/c4Rm4p).

Although many containers (such as weekly pill minders and those for eye drops, creams, patches, and inhalers) are not child-resistant and are simple for young children to open, it is crucial to keep all medications out of sight and out of reach of children. Always lock safety caps and promptly stash medication up and away from young children where it is out of their sight and reach to prevent poisoning. http://www.upandaway.org

In case of emergency/overdose

Call the poison control hotline at 1-800-222-1222 in the event of an overdose. Moreover, information can be found online at https://www.poisonhelp.org/help. Call 911 right once if the person has collapsed, experienced a seizure, is having difficulty breathing, or cannot be roused.

What other information should I know?

Keep all of your appointments with your physician and the lab. You should routinely monitor your blood pressure to see how hydralazine affects you.

You might be required to monitor your blood pressure everyday by your doctor. To learn how, ask your doctor or pharmacist.

No one else should take your medication. Any queries you may have regarding medication refills should be directed to your pharmacist.

You should keep a written record of every medication you take, including any over-the-counter (OTC) items, prescription drugs, and dietary supplements like vitamins and minerals. This list should be brought with you whenever you see a doctor or are admitted to the hospital. You should always have this information with you in case of emergencies.

Brand names

  • Apresoline®
  • Dralzine®
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