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Dipazide Brand names, Dipazide Analogs

Dipazide Brand Names Mixture

  • No information avaliable

Dipazide Chemical_Formula

C21H27N5O4S

Dipazide RX_link

http://www.rxlist.com/cgi/generic/glip.htm

Dipazide fda sheet

Dipazide FDA

Dipazide msds (material safety sheet)

Dipazide MSDS

Dipazide Synthesis Reference

Ambrogi, Logemann, U.S. Pat. 3,669,966 (1972)

Dipazide Molecular Weight

444.548 g/mol

Dipazide Melting Point

208-209 oC

Dipazide H2O Solubility

37.2 mg/L

Dipazide State

Solid

Dipazide LogP

1.763

Dipazide Dosage Forms

Immediate-release oral tablets; Extended-release oral tablets

Dipazide Indication

For use as an adjunct to diet for the control of hyperglycemia and its associated symptomatology in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM; type II), formerly known as maturity-onset diabetes, after an adequate trial of dietary therapy has proved unsatisfactory.

Dipazide Pharmacology

Glipizide, a second-generation sulfonylurea, is used with diet to lower blood glucose in patients with diabetes mellitus type II. The primary mode of action of glipizide in experimental animals appears to be the stimulation of insulin secretion from the beta cells of pancreatic islet tissue and is thus dependent on functioning beta cells in the pancreatic islets. In humans glipizide appears to lower the blood glucose acutely by stimulating the release of insulin from the pancreas, an effect dependent upon functioning beta cells in the pancreatic islets. In man, stimulation of insulin secretion by glipizide in response to a meal is undoubtedly of major importance. Fasting insulin levels are not elevated even on long-term glipizide administration, but the postprandial insulin response continues to be enhanced after at least 6 months of treatment. Some patients fail to respond initially, or gradually lose their responsiveness to sulfonylurea drugs, including glipizide.

Dipazide Absorption

Gastrointestinal absorption is uniform, rapid, and essentially complete.

Dipazide side effects and Toxicity

The acute oral toxicity was extremely low in all species tested (LD50 greater than 4 g/kg). Overdosage of sulfonylureas including glipizide can produce hypoglycemia.

Dipazide Patient Information

Glipizide is a sulfonylurea used in patients with diabetes mellitus to lower blood sugar. Notify your physician if you are pregnant or nursing. Do not change the dose or stop taking glipizide without talking with your physician. Immediate-release glipizide tablets should be taken on an empty stomach, 30 minutes before a meal. Extended-release glipizide tablets may be taken with food. Do not break, crush, or chew extended-release glipizide tablets. Patients taking extended release glipizide tablets may notice something that looks like a tablet in their stool. This is the leftover tablet after the medicine has been absorbed and is normal. Avoid drinking alcohol while taking this medication. Alcohol may cause flushing, weakness, dizziness, a tingling sensation and headache. Avoid taking aspirin with this medication. Notify your physician if you develop unexplained fever, sore throat, yellowing of the skin or eyes, dark urine, or skin rash. Notify your physician if you develop fatigue, nausea, confusion, agitation, excessive hunger, profuse sweating, numbness or tingling of lips, tongue or extremities (may indicate low blood sugar), or if you develop excessive thirst or urination, or glucose or ketones in the urine or blood (may indicate high blood sugar).

Dipazide Organisms Affected

Humans and other mammals