How Is It Used?
Take cimetidine tablets by mouth. Follow
the directions on the prescription label. Swallow the tablets
with a drink of water. If you only take cimetidine once a
day take it at bedtime. Take your doses at regular intervals.
Do not take your medicine more often than directed.
Contact your pediatrician or health care professional regarding
the use of this medicine in children. Special care may be
needed.
What should my health
care professional know before I take Cimetidine?
They need to know if you have any of these conditions:
- Frequently drink alcohol-containing beverages
- Kidney disease
- Liver disease
- Other chronic illness
- An unusual or allergic reaction to ranitidine, other medicines,
foods, dyes, or preservatives
- Pregnant or trying to get pregnant
- Breast-feeding
Are There Possible
Side Effects?
Side effects with ranitidine are infrequent
but include:
- Agitation, nervousness, depression, hallucinations
- Breast swelling and tenderness, or sexual difficulties
(impotence) in men
- Dark yellow or brown urine
- Diarrhea
- Dizziness
- Headache
- Nausea, vomiting
- Redness, blistering, peeling or loosening of the skin,
including inside the mouth
- Skin rash, itching
- Sore throat, fever
- Stomach pain
- Unusual weakness or tiredness
- Unusual bleeding or bruising
- Yellowing of the skin or eyes
Let your prescriber or health care professional
know if you get any of these side effects.
What
About Interactions With Other Drugs?
Do not take cimetidine if you take the following drugs:
- Astemizole
- Cisapride
- Dofetilide
- Pimozide
- Terfenadine
Other drugs that can interact with cimetidine include:
- Antacids
- Beta blockers, often used for high blood pressure or heart
problems
- Caffeine
- Carbamazepine
- Carmustine
- Cefditoren
- Cefpodoxime
- Cefuroxime
- Clonazepam
- Delavirdine
- Fentanyl
- Female hormones, including contraceptive or birth control
pills
- Flecainide
- Guarana
- Itraconazole
- Ketoconazole
- Meperidine
- Metformin
- Metronidazole
- Nifedipine
- Medicines for anxiety or sleeping problems, such as diazepam,
triazolam, or temazepam
- Medicines for heart rhythm problems
- Medicines for mental depression
- Phenytoin
- Theophylline
- Warfarin
Tell your prescriber or health care professional
about all other medicines you are taking, including non-prescription
medicines, nutritional supplements, or herbal products. Also
tell your prescriber or health care professional if you are
a frequent user of drinks with caffeine or alcohol, if you
smoke, or if you use illegal drugs. These may affect the way
your medicine works. Check with your health care professional
before stopping or starting any of your medicines.
What should I watch
for while taking Cimetidine?
Tell your prescriber or health care professional
if your ulcer pain does not improve or gets worse. You may
need to take this medicine for several days as prescribed
before your symptoms improve. Finish the full course of tablets
prescribed by your prescriber or health care professional
even if you feel better.
Do not self-medicate with aspirin, ibuprofen or other
antiinflammatory medicines unless directed to do so by your
health care professional; these can aggravate your condition.
Do not smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol; these increase irritation
in your stomach and can lengthen the time it will take for
your ulcer to heal.
If you get black, tarry stools or vomit up what looks like
coffee grounds, call your prescriber or health care professional
at once. You may have a bleeding ulcer.
If you need to take an antacid you should
take it at least 1 hour before or 1 hour after cimetidine.
Cimetidine will not be as effective if taken at the same time
as an antacid.
What If I Miss A
Dose?
If you miss a dose, take it as soon as
you can. If it is almost time for your next dose, take only
that dose. Do not take double or extra doses.
How Should It Be
Stored?
Keep out of the reach of children in a
container that small children cannot open.
Store at room temperature between 15 and 30
degrees C (59 and 86 degrees F). Protect from light. Keep
container tightly closed. Throw away any unused medicine after
the expiration date
NOTE: The above
information is intended to supplement, not substitute for,
the expertise and judgment of your physician, pharmacist,
or other healthcare professional. It should not be construed
to indicate that the use of the product is safe, appropriate,
or effective for you. Consult your healthcare professional
before taking the product. |