Package Leaflet: Information for the Patient
Levotiroxina Aristo 137 micrograms tablets
levotiroxina sodium
Read all of this leaflet carefully before you start taking this medicine because it contains important information for you.
Contents of the pack
Thyroxine is a hormone that is naturally produced in the body by the thyroid gland. Levotiroxina sodium is a synthetic thyroid hormone that is chemically identical to this hormone.
This medicine is used to replace the missing thyroid hormone or to relieve the stress on the thyroid gland.
Levotiroxina is used to:
Do not takeLevotiroxinaif:
Before starting treatment with levotiroxina, the following disorders or conditions should be ruled out or treated:
Warnings and precautions
Thyroid hormones should not be used for weight loss. Taking thyroid hormones will not help you lose weight if your thyroid hormone levels are normal. If you increase the dose without being specifically indicated by your doctor, you may experience serious side effects or even put your life in danger, especially in combination with certain weight loss products (see section 2 "Other medicines and levotiroxina").
If you need to change your medicine to another one that contains levotiroxina, a thyroid imbalance may occur. Talk to your doctor if you have any doubts about changing your medicine. During the transition period, close monitoring (clinical and biological) is required. You should tell your doctor if you experience any side effects, as this may indicate that your dose needs to be adjusted by increasing or decreasing it.
Talk to your doctor or pharmacist before taking levotiroxina,
Contact your doctor if you experience signs of psychotic disorders.
Blood pressure will be monitored periodically when starting treatment with levotiroxina in premature newborns with very low birth weight, as a rapid drop in blood pressure (known as circulatory collapse) may occur.
In the elderly, the dose should be carefully and individually adjusted, for example, for those with heart problems, and they should be supervised by their doctor.
Blood testsBefore starting to take levotiroxina, your doctor will perform a blood test to determine how much thyroxine your thyroid gland is producing and what dose of medicine you will need. Once you start taking the medicine, your doctor will want you to have regular blood tests to see if the medicine is working correctly.
Other medicines andlevotiroxina
Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you are taking, have recently taken, or might take any other medicines. This includes medicines that you buy without a prescription, herbal remedies, and vitamin supplements. Many medicines affect the way levotiroxina works. The effects of other medicines may also be affected by levotiroxina.
If you are about to have a test with iodine-based contrast agents, you should inform your doctor that you are taking levotiroxina.
If you are taking or have recently taken biotin, you should inform your doctor or the laboratory staff when they are going to perform laboratory tests to check your thyroid hormone levels. Biotin can affect the results of laboratory tests (see "Warnings and precautions").
The following medicines may affect how levotiroxina works:
Levotiroxina should be taken at least 4-5 hours before taking the following medicines:
The following medicines may be affected by levotiroxina:
Takinglevotiroxinawith food and drink
Products containing soy and foods with high fiber content may affect the absorption of levotiroxina. As a result, your doctor may need to adjust the dose of levotiroxina.
Pregnancy and breastfeeding
If you are pregnant or breastfeeding, think you may be pregnant, or are planning to have a baby, ask your doctor for advice before taking this medicine.
Uniform treatment with thyroid hormones is especially important during pregnancy and breastfeeding and should continue under the supervision of the treating physician.
The need for levotiroxina may increase during pregnancy due to the increase in blood levels of estrogen (female sex hormone). Therefore, thyroid function should be monitored during and after pregnancy, and the dose of levotiroxina should be adjusted as necessary.
Even during treatment with high doses of levotiroxina, the amount of thyroid hormone that passes into breast milk during breastfeeding is very low and, therefore, harmless.
Suppression tests should not be performed during pregnancy and breastfeeding.
Driving and using machines
Levotiroxina Aristo is not expected to have any influence on the ability to drive and use machines, as levotiroxina is identical to the natural thyroid hormone.
Levotiroxina Aristo contains sodium
This medicine contains less than 23 mg of sodium (1 mmol) per tablet; this is essentially "sodium-free".
Follow the administration instructions for this medication exactly as indicated by your doctor or pharmacist. In case of doubt, consult your doctor or pharmacist again.
Special attention should be paid when starting treatment with thyroid hormones in older patients, patients with coronary heart disease, and patients with chronic or severe hypothyroidism. This means that a lower initial dose should be selected, which is then increased slowly and at longer intervals, with frequent monitoring of thyroid hormones.
Experience has shown that a lower dose is also sufficient in patients with low body weight and in patients with extensive nodular goiter.
Dose
For individual treatment, tablets are available with graduated levels ranging from 25 to 200 micrograms of levotiroxine, which means that in most cases only one tablet per day is necessary.
Your doctor will determine your individual dose based on exams and laboratory tests. In general, a low dose is started, which is increased every 2 to 4 weeks, until the complete individual dose is reached. During the first weeks of treatment, you will have an appointment for laboratory tests to adjust the dose.
Use of Levotiroxina Aristo | Recommended daily dose of Levotiroxina Aristo | |
to replace natural thyroid hormones when your thyroid gland or your child's does not produce enough
| adults 25–50 micrograms 100–200 micrograms | children 12.5–50 micrograms 100–150 micrograms per m2 of body surface |
to replace natural thyroid hormones when your baby's thyroid gland does not produce enough initial dose during the first 3 months maintenance dose | Newborns and babies 10–15 micrograms per kg individual dose as recommended by the doctor | |
to prevent the recurrence of goiter after surgery | 75–200 micrograms | |
to treat benign goiter in patients with normal thyroid function | 75–200 micrograms | |
to suppress tumor growth in patients with thyroid cancer | 150–300 micrograms | |
to balance thyroid hormone levels when overproduction of hormones is treated with antithyroid medications | 50–100 micrograms |
Method of administrationThe total daily dose is taken in the morning on an empty stomach, at least half an hour before breakfast, since the active ingredient is better absorbed with an empty stomach than before or after a meal. The tablets are swallowed whole without chewing, with a glass of water.
The daily dose should be given to infants at least half an hour before the first meal of the day. For this, it is allowed to dissolve the tablet in a little water. If necessary, the tablet can be divided. It is not recommended to crush or dissolve it in water or other liquids, as the dose may not be exact.
Levotiroxina can be divided into equal doses.
Divisibility notice. Place the tablet with the notch facing up on a flat and hard surface. To divide it, push with your thumb straight in the center of the tablet. |
Duration of administration
You should take this medication for the time indicated by your doctor.
If you have an underactive thyroid gland or have undergone thyroid surgery for a malignant thyroid tumor, you will normally take levotiroxine for life.
For benign goiter and to prevent the recurrence of goiter, you should take levotiroxine for a variable period of time, from several months or years to a lifetime.
In additional therapy for the treatment of hyperactive thyroid, you should take levotiroxine while taking a thyrostatic medication.
For the treatment of benign goiter with normal thyroid function, a treatment period of 6 months to 2 years is necessary. If treatment with levotiroxine has not produced the desired result within this period, other treatment options should be considered.
If you take morelevotiroxinathan you should
In case of overdose or accidental ingestion, consult your doctor or pharmacist immediately or call the Toxicology Information Service phone: 91 562 04 20, indicating the medication and the amount ingested.
The signs of an overdose may include: agitation, confusion, irritability, fever, chest pain (angina), rapid or irregular heartbeat, rapid breathing, muscle cramps, headache, restlessness, hyperactivity, hot flashes, sweating, dilated pupils, diarrhea, tremors, difficulty sleeping, anxiety or nervousness, fatigue or emotions, convulsions. These symptoms may take up to 6 days to appear. Bring all remaining tablets and this prospectus so that medical personnel know exactly what you have taken.
If you forget to takelevotiroxina
If you forget a dose, take the usual dose when your next dose is due. Do not take a double dose to make up for missed individual doses. If you are unsure, consult your doctor or pharmacist.
If you interrupt treatment withlevotiroxina
For your treatment to be successful, you must take levotiroxina regularly at the dose prescribed by your doctor. Under no circumstances should you change, suspend, or interrupt the prescribed treatment without consulting your doctor, as symptoms may recur.
If you have any other doubts about the use of this medication, ask your doctor or pharmacist.
Like all medications, this medication can produce adverse effects, although not all people suffer from them.
Stop taking the tablets and go to the hospital immediately if you have:
Some patients may experience a severe adverse reaction to high levels of thyroid hormone. This is called "thyroid crisis". Stop taking the tablets and go to the hospital if you have any of the following symptoms (frequency unknown):
Tell your doctor or pharmacist if any of the following adverse effects continue, worsen, or if you notice other adverse effects that do not appear in the list.
Most adverse effects are similar to those of an overactive thyroid gland (hyperthyroidism, where the thyroid gland produces too much thyroxine), especially if the dose is increased too quickly at the start of treatment. They usually disappear when the dose is reduced or treatment is interrupted. Inform your doctor if side effects occur. He/she will decide if the daily dose should be reduced or if the tablets should be stopped for a few days. However, do not change the dose or stop taking the tablets without consulting your doctor first.
Unknown frequency: the frequency cannot be estimated from the available data.
Additional side effects in children
Rare(may affect up to 1 in 1,000 people)
Unknown frequency: the frequency cannot be estimated from the available data
In case of hypersensitivity to levotiroxine or to any of the other components of Levotiroxina Aristo, allergic reactions may occur in the skin and respiratory tract.
Reporting of adverse effects
If you experience any type of adverse effect, consult your doctor or pharmacist, even if it is a possible adverse effect that does not appear in this prospectus. You can also report them directly through the Spanish Pharmacovigilance System for Human Use Medicines: https://www.notificaram.es. By reporting adverse effects, you can contribute to providing more information on the safety of this medication.
Keep this medication out of sight and reach of children.
Do not use this medication after the expiration date that appears on the box and on the blister after "CAD". The expiration date is the last day of the month indicated.
Do not store above 30 °C.
Medications should not be thrown down the drain or into the trash. Deposit the containers and medications you no longer need in the SIGRE Pointof the pharmacy. In case of doubt, ask your pharmacist how to dispose of the containers and medications you no longer need. This way, you will help protect the environment.
Product Appearance and Package Contents
White, round, uncoated tablets, domed (pressure score) with a notch on one face and engraved with 137 on the other face. The tablets have an approximate diameter of 7 mm and an approximate height of 3 mm.
The tablets are presented in blisters in packages with 25, 30, 50, 60, 90, and 100 tablets.
Only some package sizes may be marketed.
Marketing Authorization Holder
Aristo Pharma GmbH
Wallenroder Straße 8-10
13435 Berlin
Germany
Manufacturer
Aristo Pharma GmbH
Wallenroder Straße 8-10
13435 Berlin
Germany
You can request more information about this medication by contacting the local representative of the marketing authorization holder:
Aristo Pharma Iberia, S.L.
C/ Solana, 26
28850, Torrejón de Ardoz
Madrid, Spain
This medication is authorized in the member states of the European Economic Area with the following names:
Austria Levothyroxin Aristo 137 Mikrogramm Tabletten
Czech Republic Levothyroxine Aristo 137 mikrogramu tablety
Germany L-Thyroxin Aristo 137 Mikrogramm Tabletten
Ireland Levothyroxine sodium Aristo 137 micrgram tablets
Italy Levotiroxina Aristo 137 mikrogrammi compresse
Netherlands Levothyroxinenatrium Aristo 137 microgram tabletten
Poland Eferox 137 mikrogramów tabletki
Portugal Levotiroxina Aristo 137 microgramas comprimidos
Spain Levotiroxina Aristo 137 microgramos comprimidos
Sweden Levothyroxine Aristo 137 mikrogram tabletter
Date of the last revision of this prospectus: December 2023
Other sources of information
Detailed information about this medication is available on the website of the Spanish Agency for Medicines and Health Products (AEMPS) http://www.aemps.gob.es/