Background pattern

Quetiapina pensa 50 mg comprimidos recubiertos con pelicula

About the medication

Introduction

Labeling:information for the user

Quetiapine Pensa 50 mg film-coated tablets

Read this labeling carefully before you start taking this medicine,because it contains important information for you.

  • Keep this labeling, as you may need to read it again.
  • If you have any questions, ask yourdoctor orpharmacist.

-This medicine has been prescribedonlyfor you, and you should not give it to others even if they havethe same symptomsas you,as it may harm them.

  • If you experience any side effects,consult your doctor or pharmacist,evenif they are not listed in this labeling. See section 4.

1. What is Quetiapina pensa and what is it used for

Quetiapina pensa contains a substance called quetiapina. It belongs to a group of medications called antipsicotics. Quetiapina can be used to treat several diseases, such as:

  • Bipolar depression: for which you feel sad. You may find that you feel depressed, guilty, lack energy, lose your appetite or cannot sleep.
  • Mania: for which you may feel very excited, euphoric, agitated, enthusiastic or hyperactive or present poor judgment which includes being aggressive or violent.
  • Schizophrenia: for which you may hear or feel things that are not there, believe things that are not true or feel abnormally suspicious, anxious, confused, guilty, tense or depressed.

Your doctor may continue prescribing quetiapina even when you are feeling better.

2. What you need to know before starting to take Quetiapine think

Do not take Quetiapina pensa if

  • You are allergic to quetiapina or any of the other ingredients in this medication (listed in section 6).
  • You are taking any of the following medications:
  • Some HIV medications.
  • Azole-type medications (for fungal infections).
  • Erythromycin or clarithromycin (for infections).
  • Nefazodone (for depression).

If you have any doubts, consult your doctor or pharmacist before taking Quetiapina pensa.

Warnings and precautions

Consult your doctor or pharmacist before starting to take Quetiapina pensa:

  • If you, or a family member, have or have had any heart problems, for example, irregular heart rhythm, heart muscle weakness, or heart inflammation, or if you are taking any medication that may affect your heart rate.
  • If you have low blood pressure.
  • If you have had a stroke, especially if you are elderly.
  • If you have liver problems.
  • If you have ever had a seizure (convulsion).
  • If you have diabetes or are at risk of developing diabetes. Your doctor may monitor your blood sugar levels while you are taking quetiapina.
  • If you know you have had low white blood cell counts (which may or may not have been caused by other medications).
  • If you are an elderly person with dementia (loss of brain function). If so, do not take quetiapina because the group of medications to which this medication belongs may increase the risk of stroke or, in some cases, death in these people.
  • If you are an elderly person with Parkinson's disease or parkinsonism.
  • If you or a family member has a history of blood clots, as medications like these have been associated with the formation of blood clots.
  • If you have or have had a condition in which your breathing is interrupted by brief periods of time during normal nighttime sleep (called "sleep apnea") and are taking medications that decrease normal brain activity ("depressants").
  • If you have or have had a condition in which you cannot completely empty your bladder (urinary retention), have an enlarged prostate, intestinal obstruction, or high pressure inside your eye. These conditions may be caused by medications (called "anticholinergics") that affect how nerve cells work, to treat certain medical conditions.
  • If you have a history of alcohol or drug abuse.
  • If you have depression or other conditions that are treated with antidepressants. The use of these medications with [product name] may cause serotonin syndrome, a potentially life-threatening condition (see "Other medications and Quetiapina pensa").

Inform your doctor immediately if after taking Quetiapina pensa you experience any of the following::

  • A combination of fever, intense muscle stiffness, sweating, or a decrease in consciousness (a condition called "neuroleptic malignant syndrome"). You may need immediate medical treatment.
  • Uncontrolled movements, mainly of your face or tongue.
  • Dizziness or feeling very drowsy. This may increase the risk of accidental injuries (falls) in elderly patients.
  • Seizures (convulsions).
  • A prolonged and painful erection (priapism).
  • Rapid and irregular heartbeats, even when at rest, palpitations, respiratory problems, chest pain, or unexplained fatigue. Your doctor should examine your heart and, if necessary, refer you to a cardiologist immediately.

These conditions may be caused by this type of medication.

Inform your doctor as soon as possible if you have:

  • Fever, symptoms similar to the flu, sore throat, or any other infection, as it could be a consequence of a very low white blood cell count and require discontinuation of quetiapina treatment and/or additional treatment.
  • Constipation with persistent abdominal pain, or constipation that has not responded to treatment, as it may lead to a more severe intestinal blockage.
  • Thoughts of suicide and worsening of depression
  • If you are depressed, you may sometimes think about harming yourself or committing suicide. This may increase at the beginning of treatment, as all these medications take time to be effective, usually around two weeks but sometimes longer. These thoughts may also increase if you stop taking your medication abruptly. You may be more likely to think this way if you are a young adult. Information obtained from clinical trials has shown an increased risk of thoughts of suicide and/or suicidal behavior in young adults under 25 with depression.
  • If you ever think about harming yourself or committing suicide, contact your doctor or go to the hospital immediately. It may help to tell a close family member or friend that you are depressed, and ask them to read this leaflet. You may ask them to tell you if they think your depression is getting worse, or if they are concerned about changes in your behavior.

Severe skin reactions (SCARs)

With the use of this medication, very rarely reported severe skin reactions (SCARs) have been noted, which may put your life at risk or be fatal. These typically manifest as:

  • Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SSJ), a generalized rash with blisters and skin peeling, particularly around the mouth, nose, eyes, and genitals.
  • Toxic epidermal necrolysis (NET), a more severe form that causes extensive skin peeling.
  • Drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS), which consists of flu-like symptoms with rash, fever, swollen lymph nodes, and abnormal blood test results (including increased white blood cell count (eosinophilia) and elevated liver enzymes).
  • Generalized Acute Exanthematous Pustulosis (AGEP), small pus-filled blisters.
  • Erythema multiforme (EM), skin rashes with irregular red patches that itch.

If you develop these symptoms, stop using quetiapina and contact your doctor or seek medical attention immediately.

Weight gain

Weight gain has been observed in patients taking quetiapina. You and your doctor should regularly monitor your weight.

Children and adolescents

Quetiapina should not be used in children and adolescents under 18 years of age.

Other medications and Quetiapina pensa

Inform your doctor if you are taking, have taken recently, or may need to take any other medication.

Do not take quetiapina if you are using any of the following medications:

  • Some HIV medications.
  • Azole-type medications (for fungal infections).
  • Erythromycin or clarithromycin (for infections).
  • Nefazodone (for depression).

Inform your doctor if you are using any of the following medications:

  • Medications for epilepsy (such as phenytoin or carbamazepine).
  • Medications for high blood pressure.
  • Barbiturates (for difficulty falling asleep).
  • Thioridazine or Lithium (other antipsychotic medications).
  • Medications that affect your heart rate, for example, medications that may cause an imbalance of electrolytes (low potassium or magnesium levels) such as diuretics (medications to urinate) or certain antibiotics (medications to treat infections).
  • Medications that may cause constipation.
  • Medications (called "anticholinergics") that affect how nerve cells work, to treat certain medical conditions.
  • Antidepressants. These medications may interact with Quetiapina pensa and you may experience symptoms such as involuntary and rhythmic muscle contractions, including those that control eye movement, agitation, hallucinations, coma, excessive sweating, tremors, exaggerated reflexes, increased muscle tension, and body temperature above 38 °C (serotonin syndrome). Contact your doctor when you experience these symptoms.

Before stopping any of your medications, consult your doctor first.

Quetiapina pensa with food, drinks, and alcohol

  • Quetiapina pensa can be taken with or without food.
  • Be careful with the amount of alcohol you consume. This is because the combined effect of quetiapina and alcohol may make you drowsy.
  • Do not take orange juice while taking this medication. It may affect how the medication works.

Pregnancy and breastfeeding

If you are pregnant or breastfeeding, consult your doctor before using this medication. Do not take this medication during pregnancy, unless you have consulted your doctor. Do not use quetiapina if you are breastfeeding.

The following symptoms, which may represent withdrawal syndrome, may appear in newborns of mothers who have used quetiapina in the last trimester (last three months of their pregnancy): tremors, muscle stiffness, and/or weakness, drowsiness, agitation, respiratory problems, and feeding difficulties. If your newborn develops any of these symptoms, you may need to contact your doctor.

Driving and operating machines

This medication may make you feel drowsy. Do not drive or operate tools or machines until you know how the medication affects you.

Quetiapina pensa contains lactose

This medication contains lactose, a type of sugar. If your doctor has indicated that you have an intolerance to certain sugars, consult with them before taking this medication.

Quetiapina pensa contains sodium

This medication contains less than 1 mmol of sodium (23 mg) per tablet; that is, it is essentially "sodium-free".

Effect on drug detection tests in urine

If you are undergoing a drug detection test in urine, taking quetiapina may produce positive results for methadone or certain antidepressant medications called tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) when using some analysis methods, although you may not be taking methadone or TCAs. If this occurs, a more specific test may be performed.

3. How to take Quetiapina pensa

Follow exactly the administration instructions of this medication as indicated by your doctor. In case of doubt, consult your doctor or pharmacist again.

Your doctor will decide your initial dose. The maintenance dose (daily dose) will depend on your illness and your needs, but it will usually be between 150 mg and 800 mg.

  • You will take your tablets once a day, at bedtime, or twice a day, depending on your illness.
  • Swallow your tablets whole with the help of water.
  • You can take the tablets with or without food.
  • Do not take grapefruit juice while taking Quetiapina pensa. It may affect how the medication works.
  • Do not stop taking your tablets even if you feel better, unless your doctor tells you to.

Liver problems

If you have liver problems, your doctor may change your dose.

Older adults

If you are an older adult, your doctor may change your dose.

Use in children and adolescents

Quetiapina should not be used in children and adolescents under 18 years of age.

If you take more Quetiapina pensa than you should

If you take more Quetiapina pensa than your doctor prescribed, you may feel drowsy, feel dizzy, and experience abnormal heartbeats. Contact your doctor or the nearest hospital immediately. Bring the Quetiapina pensa tablets with you. You can also call the Toxicological Information Service, phone: 91 562 04 20, indicating the medication and the amount taken.

If you forget to take Quetiapina pensa

If you forget to take a dose, take it as soon as you remember. If it is almost time to take the next dose, wait until then. Do not take a double dose to make up for the missed tablet.

If you interrupt treatment with Quetiapina pensa

If you stop taking quetiapina abruptly, you may be unable to sleep (insomnia), or you may feel nausea, or you may experience headaches, diarrhea, vomiting, dizziness, or irritability. Your doctor may suggest reducing the dose gradually before interrupting treatment.

If you have any other questions about the use of this medication, ask your doctor or pharmacist.

4. Possible Adverse Effects

Like all medicines, this medicine can cause side effects, although not everyone will experience them.

Very common: may affect more than 1 in 10 people

  • Dizziness (may lead to falls), headache, dry mouth.
  • Feeling drowsy (which may disappear over time as you continue to take quetiapine), (may lead to falls).
  • Withdrawal symptoms (symptoms that occur when you stop taking quetiapine), which include insomnia, nausea, headache, diarrhea, vomiting, dizziness, and irritability. A gradual withdrawal over a period of at least 1 to 2 weeks is recommended.
  • Weight gain.
  • Abnormal muscle movements. These include difficulty starting muscle movements, tremors, feeling restless or muscle stiffness without pain.
  • Changes in the amount of certain fats (triglycerides and total cholesterol).

Common: may affect up to 1 in 10 people

  • Fast heart rate.
  • Feeling like your heart is beating strongly, rapidly, or irregularly.
  • Constipation, indigestion.
  • Feeling weak.
  • Swelling of arms or legs.
  • Low blood pressure when standing. This may make you feel dizzy or faint (may lead to falls).
  • Increased blood sugar levels.
  • Blurred vision.
  • Abnormal dreams and nightmares.
  • Feeling hungrier.
  • Feeling irritable.
  • Speech and language disorder.
  • Thoughts of suicide and worsening of depression.
  • Shortness of breath.
  • Vomiting (mainly in older people).
  • Fever.
  • Changes in the amount of thyroid hormones in the blood.
  • Decrease in the number of certain types of blood cells.
  • Increases in the amount of liver enzymes measured in the blood.
  • Increases in the amount of prolactin hormone in the blood. Prolactin increases may, in rare cases, lead to the following:
    • Both men and women having breast swelling and unexpected milk production.
    • Women not having a menstrual period or having irregular periods.

Rare: may affect up to 1 in 1,000 people

  • A combination of high temperature (fever), sweating, muscle stiffness, feeling very drowsy or dizzy (a condition called "neuroleptic malignant syndrome").
  • Yellowing of the skin and eyes (jaundice).
  • Inflammation of the liver (hepatitis).
  • Prolonged and painful erection (priapism).
  • Breast swelling and unexpected milk production (galactorrhea).
  • Menstrual disorder.
  • Clots in the veins, especially in the legs (symptoms include swelling, pain, and redness in the leg), which may travel through the blood vessels to the lungs, causing chest pain and difficulty breathing. If you notice any of these symptoms, seek medical help immediately.
  • Walking, talking, eating, or other activities while asleep.
  • Decreased body temperature (hypothermia).
  • Inflammation of the pancreas.
  • A condition (called "metabolic syndrome") in which you may have a combination of 3 or more of the following effects: increased fat around your abdomen, decreased "good" cholesterol (HDL-C), increased triglycerides in the blood, increased blood pressure, and increased blood sugar levels.
  • A combination of fever, flu-like symptoms, sore throat, or any other infection with a very low white blood cell count, a condition called agranulocytosis.
  • Intestinal obstruction.
  • Increased creatine phosphokinase in the blood (a muscle substance).

Very rare: may affect up to 1 in 10,000 people

  • Severe rash, blisters, or red spots on the skin.
  • Severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis) that may cause difficulty breathing or shock.
  • Rapid swelling of the skin, usually around the eyes, lips, and throat (angioedema).
  • A severe condition of blisters on the skin, mouth, eyes, and genitals (Stevens-Johnson syndrome). See Section 2.
  • Abnormal secretion of a hormone that controls urine volume.
  • Rhabdomyolysis (breakdown of muscle fibers and muscle pain).

Unknown: the frequency cannot be estimated from available data

  • Rashes on the skin with irregular red patches (erythema multiforme). See Section 2.
  • Rapid appearance of areas of red skin with small white/yellow-filled blisters (Pustulosis Exanthemática Generalizada Aguda (AGEP). See Section 2.
  • Severe allergic reaction with symptoms such as fever and blisters on the skin and skin peeling (toxic epidermal necrolysis). See Section 2.
  • Drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS), which includes flu-like symptoms, rash, swollen lymph nodes, and abnormal blood test results (including increased white blood cell count and elevated liver enzymes). See Section 2.
  • Withdrawal symptoms may occur in newborn babies of mothers who have taken quetiapine during pregnancy.
  • Stroke.
  • Cardiomyopathy (heart muscle disorder).
  • Myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle).
  • Vasculitis (inflammation of blood vessels), often with a rash of small red or purple spots.

The class of medicines to which quetiapine belongs can cause serious heart rhythm problems that may be life-threatening in severe cases.

Some side effects are only seen when a blood test is done. These include changes in the amount of certain fats (triglycerides and total cholesterol) or blood sugar levels, changes in the amount of thyroid hormones in the blood, increased liver enzymes, decreased numbers of certain types of blood cells, decreased red blood cell count, increased creatine phosphokinase in the blood (a muscle substance), decreased sodium levels in the blood, and increased prolactin hormone levels in the blood. Prolactin increases may, in rare cases, lead to the following:

  • Both men and women having breast swelling and unexpected milk production.
  • Women not having a menstrual period or having irregular periods.

Your doctor may ask you to have blood tests from time to time.

Additional side effects in children and adolescents

The same side effects that may occur in adults may also occur in children and adolescents.

The following side effects have been observed more frequently in children and adolescents or have not been observed in adults:

Very common: may affect more than 1 in 10 people

  • Increased amount of a hormone called prolactin in the blood. Prolactin increases may, in rare cases, lead to the following:
    • Both boys and girls having breast swelling and unexpected milk production.
    • Girls not having a menstrual period or having irregular periods.
  • Increased appetite.
  • Vomiting.
  • Abnormal muscle movements. These include difficulty starting muscle movements, tremors, feeling restless or muscle stiffness without pain.
  • Increased blood pressure.

Common: may affect up to 1 in 10 people

  • Feeling weak, dizziness (may lead to falls).
  • Blocked nose.
  • Feeling irritable.

Reporting side effects

If you experience any type of side effect, consult your doctor or pharmacist, even if it is a possible side effect that does not appear in this leaflet. You can also report them directly through the Spanish System for Pharmacovigilance of Medicines for Human Use: www.notificaram.es/. By reporting side effects, you can contribute to providing more information on the safety of this medicine.

5. Conservation of Quetiapina pensa

Keepthis medicationout of the sight and reach of children.

Do not use this medication after the expiration date that appears on the packaging after CAD. The expiration date is the last day of the month indicated.

This medication does not require special storage conditions.

Medications should not be disposed of through drains or in the trash. Dispose of packaging and medications you no longer need at the SIGRE collection pointat the pharmacy. Ask yourpharmacist how to dispose of packaging and medications you no longer need. By doing so, you will help protect the environment.

6. Content of the packaging and additional information

Composition of Quetiapina pensa

  • The active ingredient is quetiapine.Each tablet contains 50 mg of quetiapine (as quetiapine fumarate).
  • The other excipients are:

Tablet core: Microcrystalline cellulose, Calcium hydrogen phosphate, Povidone, Sodium carboxymethylcellulose type A (from potato), Calcium stearate, Lactose monohydrate.

Tablet coating: Hypromellose, Titanium dioxide (E-171), Triacetin.

Appearance of the product and content of the packaging

Quetiapina pensa 50 mg film-coated tablets are white, biconvex, round, scored on one face, and have an approximate diameter of 8 mm.

The score is only for breaking the tablet if it is difficult to swallow whole.

Holder of the marketing authorization and responsible for manufacturing

Holder of the marketing authorization

Towa Pharmaceutical, S.A.

C/ de Sant Martí, 75-97

08107 Martorelles (Barcelona)

Spain

Responsible for manufacturing

Laboratorios Alter S.A.

C/ Mateo Inurria 30

28036 Madrid

Spain

This medicine is authorized in the member states of the European Economic Area with the following names:

Spain: Quetiapina pensa 50 mg film-coated tablets

Italy: Quetiapina Pensa Pharma

Portugal: Quetiapina toLife

Last review date of thisleaflet:May 2024

The detailed information of this medicine is available on the website of the Spanish Agency for Medicines and Medical Devices (AEMPS) (http://www.aemps.gob.es/)

Country of registration
Active substance
Prescription required
Yes
Composition
Lactosa monohidrato (81,4 mg mg)
This information is for reference only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a licensed doctor before taking any medication. Oladoctor is not responsible for medical decisions based on this content.

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