What are other names for this medicine?
Type of medicine: antimalarial
Generic and brand names: sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine,
oral; Fansidar
What is this medicine used for?
This medicine is a combination of 2 drugs taken by mouth to
prevent or treat malaria. It may be used alone or with
other medicines.
What should my healthcare provider know before I take this
medicine?
Before you take this medicine, tell your healthcare
provider if you have:
- an allergy to any medicine
- asthma or severe allergies
- blood problems such as anemia or G6PD deficiency
- liver damage
- severe kidney problems.
Females of childbearing age: Do not take this medicine if
you are pregnant because it may harm the baby. Tell your
healthcare provider if you are pregnant or if you plan to
become pregnant while taking this medicine. Do not
breast-feed while taking this medicine without your
healthcare provider's approval.
How do I take it?
Take this medicine exactly as your healthcare provider
prescribes. If you take this medicine to prevent malaria
while traveling, take the first dose 1 or 2 days before you
leave. Keep taking it during your stay and for 4 to 6 weeks
after you return. Do not take more than your healthcare
provider prescribes.
When taking this medicine for an acute attack of malaria,
take the exact number of tablets prescribed. Acute attacks
are usually treated with a single dose. Ask your healthcare
provider or your pharmacist to explain anything you do not
understand.
You may take this medicine with or without food. Taking it
with meals may lessen the chance the drug will upset your
stomach.
Take the tablets with plenty of water and drink lots of
liquid between doses to keep this medicine from forming
crystals in your urine, which can cause severe discomfort
when you urinate.
Take any other medicines as prescribed.
If you miss a dose, take it as soon as you remember unless
it is almost time for the next scheduled dose. In that
case, skip the missed dose and take the next one as
directed. Do not take double doses. If you are not sure of
what to do if you miss a dose, or if you miss more than one
dose, contact your healthcare provider.
What should I watch out for?
Rarely, this medicine has caused life-threatening side
effects. Contact your healthcare provider at the first
sign of a skin rash or an infection, including a fungal
infection.
You may need to have blood tests regularly to see how this
medicine affects you. Keep all appointments for these
tests.
If you need emergency care, surgery, or dental work, tell
the healthcare provider or dentist you are taking this
medicine.
This medicine may make your skin more sensitive to the sun,
which may lead to painful sunburns. While you are taking
this medicine, avoid long exposure to the sun. Wear
protective clothing, a hat, and sunscreen lotion when you
need to be outdoors. Do not use a sunlamp. If you get a
severe sunburn, contact your healthcare provider right
away.
Diabetics: This medicine may affect your blood sugar level
and change the amount of insulin or other diabetes medicine
you may need. Talk to your healthcare provider about this.
What are the possible side effects?
Along with its needed effects, your medicine may cause some
unwanted side effects. Some side effects may be very
serious. Some side effects may go away as your body adjusts
to the medicine. Tell your healthcare provider if you have
any side effects that continue or get worse.
Life-threatening (Report these to your healthcare provider
right away. If you cannot reach your healthcare provider
right away, get emergency medical care or call 911 for
help): Allergic reaction (hives; itching; rash; trouble
breathing; tightness in your chest; swelling of your lips,
tongue, and throat).
Serious (report these to your healthcare provider right
away): Rash, hives, sore throat or tongue, cough, fever,
muscle pain, shortness of breath, pale skin, yellowing of
eyes or skin, fungal infections, extreme tiredness, unusual
bleeding or bruising, seizures, painful urination.
Other: Headache, depression, nervousness, ringing in your
ears, dizziness, trouble sleeping, stomach pain, diarrhea.
What products might interact with this medicine?
When you take this medicine with other medicines, it can
change the way this or any of the other medicines work.
Nonprescription medicines, vitamins, natural remedies, and
certain foods may also interact. Using these products
together might cause harmful side effects. Talk to your
healthcare provider if you are taking:
- antiseizure medicines such as phenytoin (Dilantin),
carbamazepine (Tegretol), and phenobarbital
- methotrexate (Folex, Rheumatrex)
- sulfa drugs such as sulfadiazine, sulfamethoxazole
(Gantanol), sulfisoxazole (Gantrisin), and sulfamethizole
(Thiosulfil Forte)
- sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim (SMZ/TMP, Bactrim, Septra)
and trimethoprim (Proloprim)
- warfarin (Coumadin)
- zidovudine (Retrovir).
Keep a list of all your medicines (prescription,
nonprescription, supplements, natural remedies, and
vitamins) with you. Be sure that you tell all healthcare
providers who treat you about all the products you are
taking.
How should I store this medicine?
Store this medicine at room temperature. Keep the container
tightly closed. Protect it from heat, high humidity, and
bright light.
This advisory includes selected information only and may not
include all side effects of this medicine or interactions
with other medicines. Ask your healthcare provider or
pharmacist for more information or if you have any
questions.
Ask your pharmacist for the best way to dispose of outdated
medicine or medicine you have not used. Do not throw
medicine in the trash.
Keep all medicines out of the reach of children.
Do not share medicines with other people.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2007 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.