No information
No information is present at this moment.
No information is present at this moment.
| Hypertension |
|---|
|
| Raynaud's phenomenon |
|---|
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GFR ≥10 ml/min/1.73m2: Dose adjustment not required.
GFR <10 ml/min/1.73m2: A general recommendation on dose adjustment cannot be provided.
The complete list of all undesirable drug reactions can be found in the national Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) – click here
Flushing, dizziness, oedema, gingival recession with chronic use.
The complete list of all contra-indications can be found in the national Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) – click here
No information available on specific contra indications in children.
The complete list of all warnings and precautions can be found in the national Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) – click here
Note that there are different preparations. The “slow-release” tablet is not a controlled-release tablet, but is referred to this way because nifedipine dissolves from the tablet slowly. There is no longer any place for a fast-acting preparation (the capsule) in the treatment.
Differences between ‘OROS’ and slow-release, drawn from pharmacotherapeutic compass: in adults:
Tmax: OROS 6 hours; slow-release 1.6-4 hours.
The complete list of all interactions can be found in the national Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) – click here
This pages provides a list of drugs from the same ATC class for comparison. This does not necessarily mean that these drugs are interchangeable.
| Dihydropyridine derivatives | ||
|---|---|---|
| C08CA01 | ||
| C08CA04 | ||