DESCRIPTION | CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY | INDICATION AND USAGE | CONTRAINDICATIONS | WARNINGS | PRECAUTIONS | ADVERSE REACTIONS | DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION | OVERDOSAGE | HOW SUPPLIED
MYTELASE, brand of ambenonium chloride, is [Oxalylbis (iminoethylene)] bis[(o-chlorobenzyl) diethylammonium] dichloride, a white crystalline powder, soluble in water to 20 percent (w/v). Inactive Ingredients:
Acacia, Dibasic Calcium Phosphate, Gelatin, Lactose, Magnesium Stearate,
Starch, Sucrose.
The
compound is a cholinesterase inhibitor with all the pharmacologic actions
of acetylcholine, both the muscarinic and nicotinic types. Cholinesterase
inactivates acetylcholine. Like neostigmine, MYTELASE suppresses cholinesterase
but has the advantage of longer duration of action and fewer side effects
on the gastrointestinal tract. The longer duration of action also results
in more even strength, better endurance, and greater residual effect during
the night and on awakening than is produced by shorter-acting anticholinesterase
compounds.
This
drug is indicated for the treatment of myasthenia gravis.
Routine administration of atropine with MYTELASE is contraindicated since belladonna derivatives may suppress the parasympathomimetic (muscarinic) symptoms of excessive gastrointestinal stimulation, leaving only the more serious symptoms of fasciculation and paralysis of voluntary muscles as signs of overdosage. MYTELASE
should not be administered to patients receiving mecamylamine, or any
other ganglionic blocking agents. MYTELASE should also not be administered
to patients with a known hypersensitivity to ambenonium chloride or any
other ingredients of MYTELASE.
Because
this drug has a more prolonged action than other antimyasthenic drugs,
simultaneous administration with other cholinergics is contraindicated
except under strict medical supervision. The overlap in duration of action
of several drugs complicates dosage schedules. Therefore, when a patient
is to be given the drug, the administration of all other cholinergics
should be suspended until the patient has been stabilized. In most instances
the myasthenic symptoms are effectively controlled by its use alone.
Great care and supervision are required, since the warning of overdosage is minimal and the requirements of patients vary tremendously. It must be borne in mind constantly that a narrow margin exists between the first appearance of side effects and serious toxic effects. Caution in increasing the dosage is essential. The drug should be used with caution in patients with asthma, Parkinson’s disease or in patients with mechanical intestinal or urinary obstruction. Usage in Pregnancy. Safe use of this drug during pregnancy has not been established. Therefore, before use of MYTELASE in pregnant women or women of childbearing potential, the potential benefits should be weighed against possible risks to mother and fetus. Nursing Mothers. It is not known whether this drug is excreted in human milk. Because many drugs are excreted in human milk and because of the potential for serious adverse reactions in nursing infants from MYTELASE, a decision should be made whether to discontinue nursing or to discontinue the drug, taking into account the importance of the drug to the mother. Pediatric Use. Safety and effectiveness in pediatric patients have not been established. Geriatric
Use. Clinical Studies of MYTELASE did not include sufficient
numbers of subjects aged 65 and over to determine whether they respond
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.
Adverse effects of
anticholinesterase agents such as MYTELASE usually result from overdosage
and include muscarinic effects such as excessive salivation, abdominal
cramps, diarrhea, miosis, urinary urgency, sweating, nausea, increase
in bronchial and lacrymal secretions, and vomiting, and nicotinic effects
such as muscle cramps, fasciculation of voluntary muscles, and rarely
generalized malaise with anxiety and vertigo. (See OVERDOSAGE.)
The oral dose must be individualized according to the patient’s response because the disease varies widely in its severity in different patients and because patients vary in their sensitivity to cholinergic drugs. Since the point of maximum therapeutic effectiveness with optimal muscle strength and no gastro-intestinal disturbances is a highly critical one, the close supervision of a physician familiar with the disease is necessary. Because its action is longer, administration of MYTELASE is necessary only every three or four hours, depending on the clinical response. Usually medication is not required throughout the night, so that the patient can sleep uninterruptedly. For the patient with moderately severe myasthenia, from 5 mg to 25 mg of MYTELASE three or four times daily is an effective dose. In some patients a 5 mg dose is effective, whereas other patients require as much as from 50 mg to 75 mg per dose. The physician should start with a 5 mg dose, carefully observing the effect of the drug on the patient. The dosage may then be increased gradually to determine the effective and safe dose. The longer duration of action of MYTELASE makes it desirable to adjust dosage at intervals of one to two days to avoid drug accumulation and overdosage. (See OVERDOSAGE.) In addition to individual variations in dosage requirements, the amount of cholinergic medication necessary to control symptoms may fluctuate in each patient, depending on his activity and the current status of the disease, including spontaneous remission. A few patients have required greater doses for adequate control of myasthenic symptoms, but increasing the dosage above 200 mg daily requires exacting supervision of a physician well aware of the signs and treatment of overdosage with cholinergic medication. Edrophonium
(Tensilon®) may be used to evaluate the adequacy of the
maintenance dose of anti-cholinesterase medication. Two mg edrophonium
are administered intravenously one hour after the last anticholinesterase
dose. A transient increase in strength occurring about 30 seconds later
and lasting 3 to 5 minutes indicates insufficient maintenance dose. If
the dose is adequate or excessive, no change or a transient decrease in
strength will occur, sometimes accompanied by uscarinic symptoms.
When the drug produces over-stimulation, the clinical picture is one of increasing parasympathomimetic action that is more or less characteristic when not masked by the use of atropine. Signs and symptoms of overdosage, including cholinergic crises, vary considerably. They are usually manifested by increasing gastrointestinal stimulation with epigastric distress, abdominal cramps, diarrhea and vomiting, excessive salivation, pallor, pollakiuria, cold sweating, urinary urgency, blurring of vision, and eventually fasciculation and paralysis of voluntary muscles, including those of the tongue (thick tongue and difficulty in swallowing), shoulder, neck, and arms. Rarely, generalized malaise and vertigo may occur. Miosis, increase in blood pressure with or without bradycardia, and finally, subjective sensations of internal trembling, and often severe anxiety and panic may complete the picture. A cholinergic crisis is usually differentiated from the weakness and paralysis of myasthenia gravis insufficiently treated by cholinergic drugs by the fact that myasthenic weakness is not accompanied by any of the above signs and symptoms, except the last two subjective ones (anxiety and panic). Since
the warning of overdosage is minimal, the existence of a narrow margin
between the first appearance of side effects and serious toxic effects
must be borne in mind constantly. If signs of overdosage occur (excessive
gastrointestinal stimulation, excessive salivation, miosis, and more serious
fasciculations of voluntary muscles) discontinue temporarily all cholinergic
medication and administer from 0.5 mg to 1 mg (1/120 to 1/60 grain) of
atropine intravenously. Give other supportive treatment as indicated (artificial
respiration, tracheotomy, oxygen, etc.).
Scored, white, capsule – shaped tablets (caplets) of 10 mg, bottles of 100 (NDC 0024-1287-04) Store at room temperature
up to 25o C (77o F).
Manufactured for
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