Home » Prescription Drugs 2 » Apo Primidone Mysoline
IndicationsThe management of grand mal and psychomotor (temporal lobe) epilepsy. It is also of value in the management of focal or Jacksonian seizures myoclonic jerks and akinetic attacks.Dosage and AdministrationTreatment must always be individualised. In many patients it will be possible to use APO-PRIMIDONE alone but in some it will need to be combined with other anti-convulsants.APO-PRIMIDONE is usually given twice daily. Start with 125mg once daily late in the evening. Every three days increase the daily dose by 125mg until the patient is receiving 500mg daily. Thereafter every three days increase the daily dose by 250mg in adults or 125mg in children under 9 years of age until control is obtained or the maximum tolerated dosage is being given. This may be as much as 1 500mg per day in adults and 1 000mg per day in children.Average daily maintenance doses:Children up to 2 years: 250mg to 500mg per dayChildren 2 to 5 years: 500mg to 750mg per dayChildren 6 to 9 years: 750mg to 1 000mg per dayAdults and children over 9 years: 750mg to 1 500mg per day.The total daily dose is usually best divided and given in two equal amounts - one in the morning and the other in the evening. In certain patients it may be considered advisable to give a larger dose when seizures are more frequent e.g. if the attacks are nocturnal then all or most of the day's dose may be given at night; if the attacks are associated with some particular event such as menstruation a slight increase at the appropriate time is often beneficial.
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About Apo Primidone Mysoline:
Product Type: Prescription Drugs 2
Apo-Primidone ( Mysoline Generic Primidone )
Apo-Primidone (Mysoline Generic Primidone)
Mysoline Generic Primidone
250mg 100 Tablets 200(2 x 100) Tablets
Mysoline Generic Primidone Apo-Primidone

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World Drug News. Government funding crisis in Swaziland disrupts supply of HIV/AIDS supplies. "An acute government funding crisis in Swaziland, Africa's last absolute monarchy, is disrupting supplies of HIV/AIDS drugs and hampering the fight against the virus in the country with the world's highest infection rate, Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said Friday," Reuters reports. "Stocks of testing kits and related chemicals were 'almost dry,' making it next-to-impossible to chart the progress of the 70,000 patients on therapy or more than 130,000 other people carrying the virus, the aid agency said," according to Reuters.
"With 26 percent of its adult population, or more than 200,000 people infected, Swaziland ranks as the most AIDS-affected country," Reuters writes (Cropley, (9/9). In related news, a new report from Swaziland's government "has found that more than half of [30,000 Swazis, mostly women, working] in Swaziland's garment industry are living with HIV, and officials are realizing that the once-hailed promise of manufacturing employment has become a financial and medical nightmare for tens of thousands of Swazi women," PlusNews reports (8/11).
This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
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