Betaserc 8 mg is a round, flat, white tablet with beveled edges. The other side is engraved with the number 256. This tablet is for oral administration (to be taken by mouth) and contains 8 mg of betahistine dihydrochloride.
Betaserc 16 mg is a round, biconvex, scored, white tablet with beveled edges. On the other side, the tablet is scored and the number 267 is engraved on either side of the score line. This tablet is for oral administration (to be taken by mouth) and contains 16 mg of betahistine dihydrochloride. The tablet can be divided into equal halves.
Betaserc 24 mg is a round, biconvex, scored, white tablet with beveled edges. On the other side, the tablet is scored and the number 289 is engraved on either side of the score line. This tablet is for oral administration (to be taken by mouth) and contains 24 mg of betahistine dihydrochloride. The tablet can be divided into equal halves.
Excipients (non-medicinal ingredients): Microcrystalline cellulose, mannitol (E421), citric acid monohydrate, colloidal anhydrous silica and talc.
Indications
Ménière’s Syndrome as defined by the following core symptoms:
Symptomatic treatment of vestibular vertigo.
Dosage and administration
Your doctor will adjust the dosage according to your response to the medication. Improvement of symptoms may take up to two weeks and the best results are sometimes obtained only after a few months. There are indications that treatment from the onset of the disease prevents its progression and/or the loss of hearing in later phases of the disease.
Pediatric population
Betaserc is not recommended for use in children under the age of 18 years due to insufficient data on safety and efficacy.
Contraindications
Do not take Betaserc if you are hypersensitive to the active substance or to any of the excipients.
Warnings and special precautions for use
If you suffer from a phaeochromocytoma or bronchial asthma, your doctor will need to monitor you carefully while you are taking this medication. Furthermore, please inform your doctor or pharmacist if you have a history of peptic ulcer before taking this medication.
Effects on ability to drive and use machines
Betahistine is regarded to have no or negligible effects on the ability to drive and use machines as no effects potentially influencing this ability were found to be related to betahistine in clinical studies.
Important information about the ingredients
This product contains mannitol, which may have a mild laxative effect.
Interactions with other medications
Pregnancy and lactation
Ask your doctor or pharmacist for advice before taking any medicine during pregnancy.
Pregnancy
There is no adequate data for the use of betahistine in pregnant women. Animal studies are insufficient with respect to effects on pregnancy, embryonal/foetal development, parturition (giving birth) and postnatal development. The potential risk for humans in this regard is unknown. Betahistine should not be used during pregnancy unless is it deemed necessary by your doctor.
Lactation
It is not known whether betahistine is excreted in human milk. There are no animal studies on the excretion of betahistine in milk. It is recommended not to take any medication while nursing. However if you are nursing, talk to your doctor regarding the importance of this medicine to you, the benefits of nursing and the potential risks to your child.
Undesirable effects
Like all medicines, Betaserc may have side effects. If you notice any side effects not mentioned in this leaflet, or if any of the side effects get serious, please inform your doctor or pharmacist.
Undesirable Effects by System Organ Class:
Immune System disorders: Hypersensitivity (allergic) reactions (such as anaphylaxis) have been reported.
Gastrointestinal disorders: In some cases mild gastric complaints have been observed. These can normally be dealt with by taking the dose during meals or by lowering the dose.
Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders: In very rare cases cutaneous (skin) hypersensitivity reactions have been reported, in particular angioneurotic oedema (sudden onset of face, neck or limb swelling), urticaria (hives), rash and pruritus (itchiness).
Overdose
Symptoms of overdose
Treatment of overdose
No specific antidote is known. Treatment of overdose should include standard supportive measures.
Pharmacodynamics
Taken together these properties contribute to the beneficial therapeutic effects seen with regard to Ménière’s disease and vestibular vertigo.
Pharmacokinetics
Orally administered betahistine is readily and almost completely absorbed from all parts of the gastrointestinal tract. After absorption, the drug is rapidly and almost completely metabolized into 2-PAA (which has no pharmacological activity). Plasma levels of betahistine care very low (i.e., below the detection limit of 100 pg/ml). All pharmacokinetic analyses are therefore based on 2-PAA measurements in plasma and urine.
The plasma concentration of 2-PAA reaches a maximum 1 hour after intake. The half-life is approximately 3.5 hours. 2-PAA is readily excreted in the urine. In the dose range of 8 to 48 mg, about 85% of the original dose is excreted in the urine. Renal or fecal excretion of betahistine itself is of minor importance. Recovery rates are constant over the oral dose range of 8-48 mg indicating that the pharmacokinetics of betahistine are linear, and suggesting that the involved metabolic pathway is not saturated. Under fed conditions Cmax is lower compared to fasted conditions. However, total absorption of betahistine is similar under both conditions, indicating that food intake only slows down the absorption of betahistine.
Incompatibilities
Not applicable.
Shelf life and storage conditions
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