Indications
It
is indicated for the treatment of panic disorder, with or without agoraphobia.
Panic disorder is characterized by the occurrence of unexpected panic attacks
and associated concern about having additional attacks, worry about the
implications or consequences of the attacks.
It
is also indicated alone or as an adjunct in the treatment of the Lennox-Gastaut
Syndrome (petit mal variant), akinetic and myoclonic seizures. It may be
indicated in patients with absence seizures (petit mal) who have failed to respond
to succinimides.
The
effectiveness of Arotril in long-term use, that is, for more than 9 weeks, has
not been systematically studied in controlled clinical trials. The physician
who elects to use Arotril for extended periods should periodically reevaluate
the long-term usefulness of the drug for the individual patient.
* রেজিস্টার্ড চিকিৎসকের পরামর্শ মোতাবেক ঔষধ সেবন করুন'
Pharmacology
Clonazepam
exhibits pharmacological properties which are common to benzodiazepines and
include anticonvulsive, sedative, muscle relaxing and anxiolytic effects. The
central actions of benzodiazepines are mediated through an enhancement of the
GABAergic neurotransmission at inhibitory synapses. In the presence of
benzodiazepines the affinity of the GABA receptor for the neurotransmitter is
enhanced through positive allosteric modulation resulting in an increased
action of released GABA on the postsynaptic transmembrane chloride ion flux.
There
are also animal data showing an effect of clonazepam on serotonin. Animal data
and electroencephalographic investigations in man have shown that clonazepam
rapidly suppresses many types of paroxysmal activity including the spike and
wave discharge in absences seizures (petit mal), slow spike wave, generalized
spike wave, spikes with temporal or other locations as well as irregular spikes
and waves. Generalized EEG abnormalities are more regularly suppressed than
focal abnormalities. According to these findings clonazepam has beneficial
effects in generalized and focal epilepsies.
Dosage & Administration
Oral:
Adults:
The initial dose for adults with seizure disorders should not exceed 1.5 mg/day
divided into three doses. Dosage may be increased in increments of 0.5 to 1 mg
every 3 days until seizures are adequately controlled or until side effects
preclude any further increase. Maintenance dosage must be individualized for
each patient depending upon response. Maximum recommended daily dose is 20 mg.
The
initial dose for adults with panic disorder is 0.25 mg given in two divided
dose. An increase to the target dose for most patients of 1 mg/day may be made
after 3 days.
Pediatric
Patients: In order to minimize drowsiness, the initial dose for infants and
children (up to 10 years of age or 30 kg of body weight) should be between 0.01
and 0.03 mg/kg/day but not to exceed 0.05 mg/kg/day given in two or three
divided doses.
Injection:
Infants
and children: half of a vial (0.5 mg) by slow IV injection or by IV infusion.
Adults:
1 vial (1 mg) by slow IV injection or by IV infusion. This dose can be repeated
as required (1-4 mg are usually sufficient to reverse the status). In adults,
the rate of injection must not exceed 0.25 - 0.5 mg per minute (0.5-1.0 ml of
the prepared solution) and a total dose of 10 mg should not be exceeded.
* রেজিস্টার্ড চিকিৎসকের পরামর্শ মোতাবেক ঔষধ সেবন করুন'
Interaction
Arotril
does not appear to alter the pharmacokinetics of phenytoin, carbamazepine or
phenobarbital. The effect of Arotril on the metabolism of other drugs has not
been investigated.
Contraindications
It
should not be used in patients with a history of hypersensitivity to
benzodiazepines, nor in patients with clinical or biochemical evidence of
significant liver disease. It may be used in patients with open angle glaucoma
who are receiving appropriate therapy but is contraindicated in acute narrow
angle glaucoma.
Side Effects
The
most frequently occurring side effects of Arotril are referable to CNS
depression. Experience in treatment of seizures has shown that drowsiness has
occurred in approximately 50% of patients and ataxia in approximately 30%. In
some cases, these may diminish with time; behavior problems have been noted in
approximately 25% of patients. Abnormal eye movements, aphonia, coma, tremor,
vertigo, confusion, depression, amnesia, hallucinations, hysteria, increased
libido, insomnia, psychosis & palpitations may also occur.
Pregnancy & Lactation
Pregnancy:
From preclinical studies it cannot be excluded that clonazepam possesses the
possibility of producing congenital malformations. From epidemiological
evaluations there is evidence that anticonvulsant drugs act as teratogens.
However, it is difficult to determine from published epidemiological reports
which drug or combination of drugs is responsible for defects in the newborn.
The possibility also exists that other factors e.g. genetic factors or the
epileptic condition itself may be more important than drug therapy in leading
to birth defects. Under these circumstances, the drug should only be
administered to pregnant women if the potential benefits outweigh the risk to
the foetus. During pregnancy, Clonazepam may be administered only if there is a
compelling indication. Administration of high doses in the last trimester of
pregnancy or during labour can cause irregularities in the heartbeat of the
unborn child and hypothermia, hypotonia, mild respiratory depression and poor
feeding in the neonate. It should be borne in mind that both pregnancy itself
and abrupt discontinuation of the medication can cause exacerbation of
epilepsy. Withdrawal symptoms in newborn infants have occasionally been
reported with benzodiazepines.
Nursing
Mothers: Although the active ingredient of Clonazepam has been found to pass
into the maternal milk in small amounts only, mothers undergoing treatment with
this drug should not breastfeed. If there is a compelling indication for
Clonazepam, breastfeeding should be discontinued.
Precautions & Warnings
When
used in patients in whom several different types of seizure disorders coexist,
Arotril may increase the incidence or precipitate the onset of generalized
tonic-clonic seizures. This may require the addition of appropriate
anticonvulsants or an increase in their dosages. The concomitant use of
valproic acid and Arotril may produce absence status.
Use in Special Populations
Pediatric
Use: In infants and small children Rivotril may cause increased production of
saliva and bronchial secretion. Therefore special attention must be paid to
maintaining patency of the airways.
Geriatric
Use: Benzodiazepine pharmacologic effects appear to be greater in elderly
patients than in younger patients even at similar plasma benzodiazepine
concentrations, possibly because of age-related changes in drug–receptor
interactions, post-receptor mechanisms and organ function.
Renal
Impairment: Renal impairment does not affect the pharmacokinetics of Arotril.
Based on pharmacokinetic criteria, no dose adjustment is required in patients
with renal impairment.
Hepatic
Impairment: Plasma protein binding of Arotril in cirrhotic patients is
significantly different from that in healthy subjects (free fraction 17.1±1.0%
vs 13.9±0.2%). Although the influence of hepatic impairment on Arotril
pharmacokinetics has not been further investigated, experience with another
closely related nitrobenzodiazepine (nitrazepam) indicates that clearance of
unbound Arotril might be reduced in liver cirrhosis.
Overdose Effects
Symptoms:
Benzodiazepines commonly cause drowsiness, ataxia, dysarthria and nystagmus.
Overdose of Arotril is seldom life-threatening if the drug is taken alone, but
may lead to areflexia, apnoea, hypotension, cardiorespiratory depression and
coma. Coma, if it occurs, usually lasts a few hours but it may be more
protracted and cyclical, particularly in elderly patients. Increased frequency
of seizures may occur in patients at supratherapeutic plasma concentrations.
Benzodiazepine respiratory depressant effects are more serious in patients with
respiratory disease. Benzodiazepines increase the effects of other central
nervous system depressants, including alcohol.
Treatment:
Monitor the patient’s vital signs and institute supportive measures as
indicated by the patient’s clinical state. In particular, patients may require
symptomatic treatment for cardiorespiratory effects or central nervous system
effects. Further absorption should be prevented using an appropriate method
e.g. treatment within 1-2 hours with activated charcoal. If activated charcoal
is used airway protection is imperative for drowsy patients. In case of mixed
ingestion gastric lavage may be considered, however not as a routine measure.
If CNS depression is severe consider the use of flumazenil, a benzodiazepine
antagonist. This should only be administered under closely monitored
conditions. It has a short half-life (about an hour), therefore patients
administered flumazenil will require monitoring after its effects have worn
off. Flumazenil is to be used with extreme caution in the presence of drugs
that reduce seizure threshold (e.g. tricyclic antidepressants). Refer to the
prescribing information for flumazenil, for further information on the correct
use of Arotril.
Therapeutic
Class
Adjunct
anti-epileptic drugs, Benzodiazepine hypnotics
Reconstitution
Slow
intravenous injection: The contents of the vial must be diluted with 1 ml of
water for injection prior to administration so as to avoid local irritation of
the veins. The injection solution should be prepared immediately before use. IV
injection should be administered slowly with continuous monitoring of EEG,
respiration and blood pressure.
Intravenous
infusion: Arotril (the vial) can be diluted for infusion in a ratio of 1 vial
(1 mg) to at least 85 ml diluting media. The diluting media can be any of the
following: sodium chloride 0.9%; sodium chloride 0.45% + glucose 2.5%; glucose
5% or glucose 10%. These mixtures are stable for 24 hours at room temperature.
Infusion bags other than PVC should be used for infusing Arotril. If PVC
infusion bags are used then the mixture should be infused immediately or within
4 hours. The infusion time should not exceed 8 hours. Do not prepare Arotril
infusions using sodium bicarbonate solution, as precipitation of the solution
may occur.
Intramuscular
injection: The IM route should be used only in exceptional cases or if IV
administration is not feasible.
Storage Conditions
Keep
in a dry place away from light and heat. Keep out of the reach of children.
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