Description
Trazodone Tablets 150mg, 28 Tablets
Trazodone tablets 150mg belongs to a group of medicines called antidepressants and can be used to treat all type of depression including depression accompanied by anxiety.
Trazodone can be used to treat cats and dogs for the management of anxiety disorders. It can be used to help with separation anxiety, compulsive behaviours, barking and howling, and aggression.
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What is the price of Trazodone Tablets 150mg?
The price of Trazodone Tablets 150mg is £12.50
Where can you buy Trazodone Tablets 150mgs?
You can buy Trazodone Tablets 150mg at Dock Pharmacy Essex UK, UK Online Pharmacy.
Can you buy Trazodone Tablets 150mg Over the counter?
Trazodone Tablets 150mg is not available to buy over the counter. You need a prescription to buy Trazodone Tablets 150mg
How To Use
Always take this medicine exactly as your doctor or pharmacist have told you. Check with your doctor or pharmacist if you are not sure. The dose of trazodone will depend on your needs and the illness being treated. The tablets should always be taken with plenty of water. Taking trazodone with, or soon after, food will lower the risk of side effects. If you are to take your dose as a single dose it should be taken just before going to bed. If you feel the effect of your medicine is too weak or too strong, do not change the dose yourself, but ask your doctor.
Adults:
The recommended starting dose is 150mg each day in divided doses after food or as a single dose at bedtime.
This may be increased up to 300mg each day in single or divided doses.
The major portion of a divided dose is to be taken at bedtime. If you are in hospital the dose may be further increased to 600mg each day in divided doses.
Elderly:
Dosage in elderly or frail patients should be started at 100mg each day in divided doses or as a single dose at bedtime. This may be increased by your doctor depending on how you react to this medicine. Dosages above 300mg each day are unlikely to be required.
Use in children and adolescents
Trazodone is not recommended for use in children and adolescents under 18 years of age.
ANXIETY:
The recommended starting dose is 75mg each day and this may be increased to 300mg each day as necessary.
It is important to stick to the dose on the label of the medicine. Do not adjust your dose without consulting with your doctor.
If you or someone else swallows several of these tablets all together, contact your doctor or nearest hospital emergency department immediately. Always take any tablets left over with you along with the box, as this will allow easier identification of the tablets.
The following effects may occur: nausea, sickness, drowsiness, dizziness, fainting, fits (seizures), confusion and problems with your heart or breathing.
If you forget to take a dose, take it as soon as you remember. If it is almost time for your next dose do not take a double dose to make up for a forgotten dose, just carry on as before.
- Keep taking trazodone until your doctor tells you to stop. Do not stop taking trazodone just because you feel better
- When your doctor tells you to stop taking these tablets he/she will help you stop taking them gradually
- Stopping your medicine too quickly could cause sleep problems, leave you feeling more irritable than usual and cause you to sweat more than usual.
If you have any further questions on the use of this medicine, ask your doctor, pharmacist or nurse.
Delivery Options
Delivery options
All deliveries are subject to the availability of the product and product sale conditions been met.
Order & Collect
Free next-day collection from In-Store
UK Delivery
Standard Delivery within the UK £3.50 Delivery time 3-4 days
First Class Delivery within the UK £5.90 Delivery time 1-2 days
Priority Delivery within the UK £7.10. Next day delivery by 1pm. Order must be placed by 1pm. Priority delivery is only available Monday to Thursday.
Europe Delivery
Standard Delivery within EEC from £12.50 Delivery time up to 5 days depending on the local delivery service within your country.
Expedited Delivery within EEC £39.50 Delivery time 2 days. Delivery by DHL, UPS or TNT.
Rest of the World
Standard Delivery Rest of the World from £16.10 Delivery Time 10 – 15 Days
Expedited Delivery Rest of the World £55.09 Delivery 5 days. Delivery service by DHL, TNT or UPS
For more information see our Shipping Policy or view our Return policy.
Product Details
- if you are allergic to trazodone hydrochloride or any of the other ingredients of this medicine (listed in section 6). The signs of an allergic reaction include a red and lumpy skin rash, swallowing or breathing problems, swelling of your eyelids, lips, face, throat or tongue, unexplained high temperature (fever) and feeling faint
- if you have recently had a heart attack
- if you are a heavy drinker or if you are taking sleeping tablets
- if you are under 18 years of age.
Do not take trazodone if any of the above applies to you. If you are not sure, talk to your doctor or pharmacist prior to taking this medicine.
Thoughts of suicide and worsening of your depression or anxiety disorder
If you are depressed and/or have anxiety disorders you can sometimes have thoughts of harming or killing yourself. These may be increased when first starting antidepressants, since these medicines all take time to work, usually about two weeks but sometimes longer.
You may be more likely to think like this:
- If you have previously had thoughts about killing or harming yourself
- If you are a young adult. Information from clinical trials has shown an increased risk of suicidal behaviour in adults aged less than 25 years with psychiatric conditions who were treated with an antidepressant.
If you have thoughts of harming or killing yourself at any time, contact your doctor or go to a hospital straight away.
You may find it helpful to tell a relative or close friend that you are depressed or have an anxiety disorder, and ask them to read this leaflet. You might ask them to tell you if they think your depression or anxiety is getting worse, or if they are worried about changes in your behaviour.
If you are elderly, you may be more prone to side effects, increased caution is necessary especially when taking other medicines at the same time as Trazodone tablets or if you have some other diseases.
- if you suffer from Epilepsy (fits or seizures)
- if you have severe liver, kidney or heart problems
- if you are pregnant, trying to become pregnant or are breast-feeding
- if you have an overactive thyroid gland (hyperthyroidism)
- if you have problems passing water or needing to pass water (urine) more frequently
- if you have narrow angle glaucoma (an eye disease)
- if you suffer from schizophrenia or other type of mental disorder
If you are not sure if any of the above applies to you, talk to your doctor or pharmacist before taking trazodone.
Trazodone tablets should not be used in children and adolescents under 18 years of age.
Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you are taking, have recently taken or might take any other medicines. This includes medicines you buy without a prescription, including herbal medicines. This is because some medicines and trazodone may interfere with each other.
Tell your doctor if you are taking any of the following medicines:
- MAOI (Mono Amine Oxidase Inhibitors) medicines such as tranylcypromine, phenelzine and isocarboxazid (for depression) or selegiline (for Parkinson’s disease). Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you are taking them now or have taken them in the last 2 weeks.
- Muscle relaxants and inhaled anaesthetics
- Other antidepressants such as amitriptyline or fluoxetine
- Sedatives such as tranquilizers and sleeping pills
- Medicines used to treat epilepsy (e.g. carbamazepine or phenytoin)
- Medicines used to treat high blood pressure (e.g. clonidine) or heart disease (e.g. digoxin)
- Medicines used to treat fungal infections such as ketoconazole and itraconazole
- Some medicines used to treat HIV such as ritonavir and indinavir
- Erythromycin (a type of antibiotic used to treat infections)
- Levodopa (used for Parkinson’s disease)
- St. John’s Wort (a herbal medicine)
- Warfarin (a drug used to stop blood from clotting)
- Phenothiazines: chlorpromazine, fluphenazine, levomepromazine, perphenazine.
If you are going to have an anaesthetic (for an operation), tell your doctor or dentist that you are taking trazodone.
You should avoid drinking alcohol while taking trazodone tablets. This is because trazodone can change the way alcohol affects you.
If you are pregnant or breast-feeding, think you may be pregnant or are planning to have a baby, ask your doctor or pharmacist for advice before taking this medicine.
Pregnancy
Trazodone tablets should not be taken during the first three months of pregnancy.
Breast-feeding
Trazodone can pass into breast-milk and should only be used if the benefit to the mother outweighs the risk to the child.
Trazodone is a drug which acts on the central nervous system and may make you feel sleepy or less alert. Do not drive, operate machinery or do anything that requires you to be alert until you know how this medicine affects you.
Trazodone tablets contain lactose. If you have been told by your doctor that you have intolerance to some sugars, contact your doctor before taking this medicinal product.
This medicine contains less than 1 mmol Sodium (23 mg) per tablet. that is to say essentially ‘sodium-free’
This medicine contains 0.95 mg propylene glycol per tablet.
Side Effects
Like all medicines, this medicines can cause side effects, although not everybody gets them.
- A long lasting and painful erection unrelated to sexual activity that will not go away (priapism)
- You get swelling of your face, lips, tongue, throat, hands or ankles, swallowing or breathing difficulties or itching of the skin and nettle rash. This is an allergic reaction to trazodone
- Yellowing of the eyes or skin which could be a liver problem (such as jaundice) or other abnormalities of liver function
- You have severe abdominal pain and bloating, which may be accompanied by vomiting or constipation. These may be signs that your intestine is not working properly (paralytic ileus)
- Bruising more easily than usual. This could be because of a blood disorder (thrombocytopenia)
- Getting more infections than usual (sore throat, skin infections) which may indicate a blood disorder (agranulocytosis).
- Thoughts of harming or killing yourself
- Feeling tired, faint, dizzy, having pale skin. These could be signs of anaemia
- Convulsions, fits (seizures)
- Unusual skin sensations such as numbness, tingling, pricking, burning or creeping on the skin (paraesthesia)
- Feeling confused, restless, sweating, shaking, shivering, hallucinations (strange visions or sounds), sudden jerks of the muscles or a fast heartbeat, you may have something called Serotonin syndrome
- Feeling very unwell possibly with shortness of breath (dyspnoea), difficulty in walking or walking with a shuffling gait, shaking, uncontrolled muscle twitching and a high temperature (above 38°C). This could be a rare condition known as Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome
- Rapid, slow or irregular heartbeat.
Not known (frequency cannot be estimated from the available data)
- Feeling drowsy or sleepy, tiredness
- Feeling less alert than usual
- Feeling sick (nausea) or being sick (vomiting), indigestion
- Constipation, diarrhoea
- Dry mouth, altered taste, increased amounts of saliva, blocked nose
- Sweating more than usual
- Dizziness, headache, confusion, weakness, tremor (shaking)
- Blurred vision
- Loss of appetite and weight loss
- Feeling dizzy or light-headed on standing or sitting up quickly (postural hypotension), fainting (syncope)
- Feeling restless and having difficulty sleeping
- Water retention which may cause swollen arms or legs
- Skin rash, itching
- Chest pain
- Pain in limbs, back pain, pain in your muscles, pain in your joints
- Jerking movements that you cannot control, mainly of the arms and legs, uncontrolled muscle movements or twitches
- Frequent infections with high temperature, severe chills, sore throat or mouth ulcers
These could be signs of a blood problem called leucopenia
- Feeling anxious or more nervous than usual, feeling agitated
- Overactive behaviour or thoughts (mania), believing things that are not true (delusions), memory disturbance
- Nightmares
- Decreased sex drive
- Feeling dizzy, possibly with a “spinning” feeling (vertigo)
- High blood pressure
- High temperature
- Flu type symptoms
- Difficulty with speaking
- Higher than normal number of white blood cells (seen by a blood test).
- High levels of liver enzymes in your blood (shown by a blood test).
- Severe liver disorders such as hepatitis.
- Liver failure with potential fatal outcome.
- Feeling tired, weak and confused, having muscle that ache, are stiff or do not work well. There may also be headache, loss of appetite, nausea or vomiting, convulsion. This may be due to low sodium levels in your blood.
If you get any side effects, talk to your doctor, pharmacist or nurse. This includes any possible side effects not listed in this leaflet. You can also report side effects directly via the Yellow Card Scheme Website: www.mhra.gov.uk/yellowcard or search for MHRA Yellow Card in the Google Play or Apple App Store
By reporting side effects you can help provide more information on the safety of this medicine.
Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
Michael Gravener (verified owner) –
Jumoke Odebiyi (store manager) –
Dear Michael, thank you for your 5-star rating.
Julia (verified owner) –
Bought on prescription for my dog excellent service
Julie Cutbush (store manager) –
Dear Julia,
We are grateful for your 5 star review.