http://medsindialtd.net
VIP Memberships start at just $15Join now help us stay online, and start to save a bundle



Meds, Medical Conditions, and Treatment >> Prescription drug information

Pages: 1
MelodyAdministrator
Moderator


Reged: 03/20/03
Posts: 674
Loc: DrugBuyers.Com
Neurontin - Gabapentin
      #144093 - 03/03/04 03:06 PM

Neurontin® (gabapentin) Capsules, Neurontin® (gabapentin) Tablets, and Neurontin® (gabapentin) Oral Solution are supplied as imprinted hard shell capsules containing 100 mg, 300 mg, and 400 mg of gabapentin, elliptical film-coated tablets containing 600 mg and 800 mg of gabapentin or an oral solution containing 250 mg/5 mL of gabapentin. The inactive ingredients for the capsules are lactose, cornstarch, and talc. The 100 mg capsule shell contains gelatin and titanium dioxide. The 300 mg capsule shell contains gelatin, titanium dioxide, and yellow iron oxide. The 400 mg capsule shell contains gelatin, red iron oxide, titanium dioxide, and yellow iron oxide. The imprinting ink contains FD&C Blue No. 2 and titanium dioxide. The inactive ingredients for the tablets are poloxamer 407, copolyvidonum, cornstarch, magnesium stearate, hydroxypropyl cellulose, talc, candelilla wax and purified water. The imprinting ink for the 600 mg tablets contains synthetic black iron oxide, pharmaceutical shellac, pharmaceutical glaze, propylene glycol, ammonium hydroxide, isopropyl alcohol and n-butyl alcohol. The imprinting ink for the 800 mg tablets contains synthetic yellow iron oxide, synthetic red iron oxide, hypromellose, propylene glycol, methanol, isopropyl alcohol and deionized water.

The inactive ingredients for the oral solution are glycerin, xylitol, purified water and artificial cool strawberry anise flavor.

Gabapentin is described as 1-(aminomethyl)cyclohexaneacetic acid with a molecular formula of C9H17NO2 and a molecular weight of 171.24.

Gabapentin is a white to off-white crystalline solid with a pKa1 of 3.7 and a pKa2 of 10.7. It is freely soluble in water and both basic and acidic aqueous solutions. The log of the partition coefficient (n-octanol/0.05M phosphate buffer) at pH 7.4 is –1.25.

INDICATIONS AND USAGE
Postherpetic Neuralgia

Neurontin® (gabapentin) is indicated for the management of postherpetic neuralgia in adults.

Epilepsy

Neurontin® (gabapentin) is indicated as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of partial seizures with and without secondary generalization in patients over 12 years of age with epilepsy. Neurontin is also indicated as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of partial seizures in pediatric patients age 3 – 12 years.

Patients should be instructed to take Neurontin® only as prescribed.

Patients should be advised that Neurontin® may cause dizziness, somnolence and other symptoms and signs of CNS depression. Accordingly, they should be advised neither to drive a car nor to operate other complex machinery until they have gained sufficient experience on Neurontin® to gauge whether or not it affects their mental and/or motor performance adversely. Patients who require concomitant treatment with morphine may experience increases in gabapentin concentrations. Patients should be carefully observed for signs of CNS depression, such as somnolence, and the dose of Neurontin® or morphine should be reduced appropriately (see Drug Interactions).

WARNINGS
Neuropsychiatric Adverse Events—Pediatric Patients 3-12 years of age

Gabapentin use in pediatric patients with epilepsy 3–12 years of age is associated with the occurrence of central nervous system related adverse events. The most significant of these can be classified into the following categories: 1) emotional lability (primarily behavioral problems), 2) hostility, including aggressive behaviors, 3) thought disorder, including concentration problems and change in school performance, and 4) hyperkinesia (primarily restlessness and hyperactivity). Among the gabapentin-treated patients, most of the events were mild to moderate in intensity.

In controlled trials in pediatric patients 3–12 years of age the incidence of these adverse events was: emotional lability 6% (gabapentin-treated patients) vs 1.3% (placebo-treated patients); hostility 5.2% vs 1.3%; hyperkinesia 4.7% vs 2.9%; and thought disorder 1.7% vs 0%. One of these events, a report of hostility, was considered serious. Discontinuation of gabapentin treatment occurred in 1.3% of patients reporting emotional lability and hyperkinesia and 0.9% of gabapentin-treated patients reporting hostility and thought disorder. One placebo-treated patient (0.4%) withdrew due to emotional lability.

Withdrawal Precipitated Seizure, Status Epilepticus


Antiepileptic drugs should not be abruptly discontinued because of the possibility of increasing seizure frequency. In the placebo-controlled studies in patients >12 years of age, the incidence of status epilepticus in patients receiving Neurontin® was 0.6% (3 of 543) versus 0.5% in patients receiving placebo (2 of 378). Among the 2074 patients >12 years of age treated with Neurontin® across all studies (controlled and uncontrolled) 31 (1.5%) had status epilepticus. Of these, 14 patients had no prior history of status epilepticus either before treatment or while on other medications. Because adequate historical data are not available, it is impossible to say whether or not treatment with

Neurontin® is associated with a higher or lower rate of status epilepticus than would be expected to occur in a similar population not treated with Neurontin®.

Tumorigenic Potential

In standard preclinical in vivo lifetime carcinogenicity studies, an unexpectedly high incidence of pancreatic acinar adenocarcinomas was identified in male, but not female, rats. (See PRECAUTIONS: Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment of Fertility.) The clinical significance of this finding is unknown. Clinical experience during gabapentin’s premarketing development provides no direct means to assess its potential for inducing tumors in humans. In clinical studies in adjunctive therapy in epilepsy comprising 2085 patient-years of exposure in patients >12 years of age, new tumors were reported in 10 patients (2 breast, 3 brain, 2 lung, 1 adrenal, 1 non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, 1 endometrial carcinoma in situ), and preexisting tumors worsened in 11 patients (9 brain, 1 breast, 1 prostate) during or up to 2 years following discontinuation of Neurontin®. Without knowledge of the background incidence and recurrence in a similar population not treated with Neurontin®, it is impossible to know whether the incidence seen in this cohort is or is not affected by treatment.

Sudden and Unexplained Death in Patients With Epilepsy

During the course of premarketing development of Neurontin® 8 sudden and unexplained deaths were recorded among a cohort of 2203 patients treated (2103 patient-years of exposure). Some of these could represent seizure-related deaths in which the seizure was not observed, e.g., at night. This represents an incidence of 0.0038 deaths per patient-year. Although this rate exceeds that expected in a healthy population matched for age and sex, it is within the range of estimates for the incidence of sudden unexplained deaths in patients with epilepsy not receiving Neurontin® (ranging from 0.0005 for the general population of epileptics to 0.003 for a clinical trial population similar to that in the Neurontin® program, to 0.005 for patients with refractory epilepsy). Consequently, whether these figures are reassuring or raise further concern depends on comparability of the populations reported upon to the Neurontin® cohort and the accuracy of the estimates provided.

PRECAUTIONS
INFORMATION FOR PATIENTS

Patients should be instructed to take Neurontin® only as prescribed.

Patients should be advised that Neurontin® may cause dizziness, somnolence and other symptoms and signs of CNS depression. Accordingly, they should be advised neither to drive a car nor to operate other complex machinery until they have gained sufficient experience on Neurontin® to gauge whether or not it affects their mental and/or motor performance adversely. Patients who require concomitant treatment with morphine may experience increases in gabapentin concentrations. Patients should be carefully observed for signs of CNS depression, such as somnolence, and the dose of Neurontin® or morphine should be reduced appropriately (see Drug Interactions).

Laboratory Tests

Clinical trials data do not indicate that routine monitoring of clinical laboratory parameters is necessary for the safe use of Neurontin®. The value of monitoring gabapentin blood concentrations has not been established. Neurontin® may be used in combination with other antiepileptic drugs without concern for alteration of the blood concentrations of gabapentin or of other antiepileptic drugs.

Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment of Fertility

Gabapentin was given in the diet to mice at 200, 600, and 2000 mg/kg/day and to rats at 250, 1000, and 2000 mg/kg/day for 2 years. A statistically significant increase in the incidence of pancreatic acinar cell adenomas and carcinomas was found in male rats receiving the high dose; the no-effect dose for the occurrence of carcinomas was 1000 mg/kg/day. Peak plasma concentrations of gabapentin in rats receiving the high dose of 2000 mg/kg were 10 times higher than plasma concentrations in humans receiving 3600 mg per day, and in rats receiving 1000 mg/kg/day peak plasma concentrations were 6.5 times higher than in humans receiving 3600 mg/day. The pancreatic acinar cell carcinomas did not affect survival, did not metastasize and were not locally invasive. The relevance of this finding to carcinogenic risk in humans is unclear.

Studies designed to investigate the mechanism of gabapentin-induced pancreatic carcinogenesis in rats indicate that gabapentin stimulates DNA synthesis in rat pancreatic acinar cells in vitro and, thus, may be acting as a tumor promoter by enhancing mitogenic activity. It is not known whether gabapentin has the ability to increase cell proliferation in other cell types or in other species, including humans.

Gabapentin did not demonstrate mutagenic or genotoxic potential in three in vitro and four in vivo assays. It was negative in the Ames test and the in vitro HGPRT forward mutation assay in Chinese hamster lung cells; it did not produce significant increases in chromosomal aberrations in the in vitro Chinese hamster lung cell assay; it was negative in the in vivo chromosomal aberration assay and in the in vivo micronucleus test in Chinese hamster bone marrow; it was negative in the in vivo mouse micronucleus assay; and it did not induce unscheduled DNA synthesis in hepatocytes from rats given gabapentin. No adverse effects on fertility or reproduction were observed in rats at doses up to 2000 mg/kg (approximately 5 times the maximum recommended human dose on a mg/m2 basis).

Pregnancy

Pregnancy Category C: Gabapentin has been shown to be fetotoxic in rodents, causing delayed ossification of several bones in the skull, vertebrae, forelimbs, and hindlimbs. These effects occurred when pregnant mice received oral doses of 1000 or 3000 mg/kg/day during the period of organogenesis, or approximately 1 to 4 times the maximum dose of 3600 mg/day given to epileptic patients on a mg/m2 basis. The no-effect level was 500 mg/kg/day or approximately ½ of the human dose on a mg/m2 basis. When rats were dosed prior to and during mating, and throughout gestation, pups from all dose groups (500, 1000 and 2000 mg/kg/day) were affected. These doses are equivalent to less than approximately 1 to 5 times the maximum human dose on a mg/m2 basis. There was an increased incidence of hydroureter and/or hydronephrosis in rats in a study of fertility and general reproductive performance at 2000 mg/kg/day with no effect at 1000 mg/kg/day, in a teratology study at 1500 mg/kg/day with no effect at 300 mg/kg/day, and in a perinatal and postnatal study at all doses studied (500, 1000 and 2000 mg/kg/day). The doses at which the effects occurred are approximately 1 to 5 times the maximum human dose of 3600 mg/day on a mg/m2 basis; the no-effect doses were approximately 3 times (Fertility and General Reproductive Performance study) and approximately equal to (Teratogenicity study) the maximum human dose on a mg/m2 basis. Other than hydroureter and hydronephrosis, the etiologies of which are unclear, the incidence of malformations was not increased compared to controls in offspring of mice, rats, or rabbits given doses up to 50 times (mice), 30 times (rats), and 25 times (rabbits) the human daily dose on a mg/kg basis, or 4 times (mice), 5 times (rats), or 8 times (rabbits) the human daily dose on a mg/m2 basis. In a teratology study in rabbits, an increased incidence of postimplantation fetal loss occurred in dams exposed to 60, 300, and 1500 mg/kg/day, or less than approximately ¼ to 8 times the maximum human dose on a mg/m2 basis. There are no adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant women. This drug should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus.

Use in Nursing Mothers

Gabapentin is secreted into human milk following oral administration. A nursed infant could be exposed to a maximum dose of approximately 1 mg/kg/day of gabapentin. Because the effect on the nursing infant is unknown, Neurontin® should be used in women who are nursing only if the benefits clearly outweigh the risks.

Pediatric Use

Safety and effectiveness of Neurontin® (gabapentin) in the management of postherpetic neuralgia in pediatric patients have not been established. Effectiveness as adjunctive therapy in the treatment of partial seizures in pediatric patients below the age of 3 years has not been established (see CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, Clinical Studies).

Geriatric Use

The total number of patients treated with Neurontin® in controlled clinical trials in patients with postherpetic neuralgia was 336, of which 102 (30%) were 65 to 74 years of age, and 168 (50%) were 75 years of age and older. There was a larger treatment effect in patients 75 years of age and older compared with younger patients who received the same dosage. Since gabapentin is almost exclusively eliminated by renal excretion, the larger treatment effect observed in patients ³75 years may be a consequence of increased gabapentin exposure for a given dose that results from an age-related decrease in renal function. However, other factors cannot be excluded. The types and incidence of adverse events were similar across age groups except for peripheral edema and ataxia, which tended to increase in incidence with age. Clinical studies of Neurontin® in epilepsy did not include sufficient numbers of subjects aged 65 and over to determine whether they responded differently from younger subjects. Other reported clinical experience has not identified differences in responses between the elderly and younger patients. In general, dose selection for an elderly patient should be cautious, usually starting at the low end of the dosing range, reflecting the greater frequency of decreased hepatic, renal, or cardiac function, and of concomitant disease or other drug therapy. This drug is known to be substantially excreted by the kidney, and the risk of toxic reactions to this drug may be greater in patients with impaired renal function. Because elderly patients are more likely to have decreased renal function, care should be taken in dose selection, and dose should be adjusted based on creatinine clearance values in these patients

--------------------
Tip: Try our Database to find out who has the best deals...


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
mpcagh
Member


Reged: 12/27/03
Posts: 130
Loc: California
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: Melody]
      #144103 - 03/03/04 03:28 PM

I was prescribed this for my back pain. My doc said it would interfere with the pain signals to my brain, or something like that.

--------------------
"There's a fine line between love and hate, and a mile full of lessons in between." William M. Siegel, Jr.


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
trex
Journeyman


Reged: 01/04/04
Posts: 70
Loc: Australia
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: mpcagh]
      #144192 - 03/03/04 07:01 PM

My brother also takes Neurontin for nerv pain!!
Apparently it lessens the nerv signals!!! It works resonably well for him!


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
thar101
Newbie


Reged: 11/06/03
Posts: 41
Loc: Midwest
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: trex]
      #144195 - 03/03/04 07:30 PM

I too have been prescribed Nuerontin. I was on it for about 3 months after my DR. decided it was not effective for my pain treatment.

Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
PrivateRealm
Threadhead


Reged: 03/18/03
Posts: 904
Loc: usa
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: thar101]
      #145165 - 03/07/04 02:23 AM

I was an Nuerontin for 2 years for mood swings, but noticed no help with my back pain.

--------------------
KeriAnne~~~
"Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take - but by the moments that take our breath away."


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
dsack
Veteran


Reged: 01/20/02
Posts: 543
Loc: midwest
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: Melody]
      #149837 - 03/23/04 07:42 AM

Neurontin is another one of those drugs that pharmaceutical companies are trying to push doctors to prescribe for a myriad of reasons other than what is really intended for: epilepsy.

Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
lyndadogg
Banned


Reged: 04/29/03
Posts: 63
Loc: southern by the grace of God
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: dsack]
      #174683 - 07/16/04 12:53 PM

Lawsuits are flying all over the place about Neurontin. Mostly by people who were prescribed it for conditions other than what it is meant for: Epilepsy. I took it for almost a year and it did absolutely nothing for me except burn a hole in my wallet. I am upset that it was prescribed to me when it was meant for something else but the pharmacutical company pushed this drug for anything and everything and now they are paying for it.

--------------------
"This is Bat Country"~~~Raul Duke~~Hunter S. Thompson Rest In Peace Doc-you changed my life


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
johng
Board Addict


Reged: 02/13/03
Posts: 361
Loc: great lakes
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: lyndadogg]
      #174691 - 07/16/04 01:17 PM

it irks me when the docs push nurotin. it did nothing for my pain did notheing for W/D. I took it religiosly because it was the only med for my pain. While I noted light changes in pain it never took it away. I understand the concept. The pain neurons in the spin/ brain are being over stimulated and this drug slows that overexcitaion in the brain and COULD slow the overstimulation of pain receptors. It should not be the only med used. I saw aPMD who said it is a triad approch pain meds/muscle relaxer/nurontin. the majority of docs try to use this med instead of pain meds and that where it causes failure to relive pain. IMP!

--------------------
Ask and it will be given to you Matthew 7:7


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
treezat
Journeyman


Reged: 05/22/04
Posts: 50
Loc: southeast US
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: Melody]
      #177708 - 08/03/04 04:46 PM

there is a huge scam behind this drug. it was marketed to be a blockbuster (1 billion plus) but since it was targeted for such a small group (epilepsy RESISTANT treatment patients) they pulled some highly illegal shite and pushed it hardcore. do a google search and youll find out alot of stuff. for example :

http://www.citizen.org/ELETTER/ARTICLES/neurontin.htm


I was on it for a while withdrawl was horrible and it kept me fookered all day. I was tolerant of everything and far from depressed, but I couldnt cry and hardly laughed. It made me wan to sleep all hours of the day. it dopes you up but they dont know what it doesn and it may be very armful. my advice: be careful

--------------------
--Treezat (HiPpY)
~~Peace on your journey to wellness. Share all medicine and knowledge thereof~ for what you give is what you get. Be well, may you find peace and relief.


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
timberland
Enthusiast


Reged: 07/10/04
Posts: 236
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: treezat]
      #177710 - 08/03/04 05:00 PM

Man, this stuff is gawdawful - a friend of mine took the max dose recommended by his doctor and tried to enter a convenience store through a brick wall! He hit the wall, stumbled back a bit, passed out, and was carried home discretely by his buddies.

Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
sunflower29
Member


Reged: 04/13/04
Posts: 154
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: timberland]
      #177719 - 08/03/04 05:53 PM

Some of the reactions described from Neurontin (like the brick wall incident) remind me of my time on Remeron. The quickest chemical lobotomy I've ever experienced. That stuff knocked me out. It made me feel like I was on a horrible acid trip, plus it makes you just want to eat, and I mean GORGE non-stop, all day long. It was a nightmare drug. It made me feel totally insane. He was mildly suprised when I told him about my reaction, and I don't think he really believed me. I never trusted him after that.

Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
MkivTT
Stranger


Reged: 07/16/04
Posts: 17
Re: Neurontin - Gabapentin [Re: sunflower29]
      #177839 - 08/04/04 09:23 AM

isnt remeron an anti-depresent? I thought they were sleeping pills that were prescribed to me, until about 5 min after i took it i didnt know what the heck was going on. I talked to the doctor and he was like oh, just give it a couple of days, it will pass... lol

Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
Pages: 1



Extra information
0 registered and 3 anonymous users are browsing this forum.

Moderator:  Melody 

Print Topic

Forum Permissions
      You cannot start new topics
      You cannot reply to topics
      HTML is enabled
      UBBCode is enabled

Rating:
Topic views: 1955

Rate this topic

Jump to

Help & Contact Information | Privacy statement | Rules Free Members Area

*
UBB.threads™ 6.5
With Modifications from ThreadsDev.com by Joshua Pettit