FUROSEMIDE TABLETS, USP Rx only

Manufacturer
State of Florida DOH Central Pharmacy
Effective date
2010-06-02
Label type
HUMAN PRESCRIPTION DRUG LABEL
Version
1
Source
full-release
Hydrated at
2026-05-31 20:08:42

Key Label Information#

Uses

INDICATIONS AND USAGE

Edema Furosemide tablets are indicated in adults and pediatric patients for the treatment of edema associated with congestive heart failure, cirrhosis of the liver, and renal disease, including the nephrotic syndrome. Furosemide is particularly useful when an agent with greater diuretic potential is desired. Hypertension Furosemide tablets may be used in adults for the treatment of hypertension alone or in combination with other antihypertensive agents. Hypertensive patients who cannot be adequately controlled with thiazides will probably also not be adequately controlled with furosemide alone.

CONTRAINDICATIONS

Furosemide tablets are contraindicated in patients with anuria and in patients with a history of hypersensitivity to furosemide.

Warnings

WARNING

Furosemide is a potent diuretic which, if given in excessive amounts, can lead to a profound diuresis with water and electrolyte depletion. Therefore, careful medical supervision is required and dose and dose schedule must be adjusted to the individual patient’s needs. (See “DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION”.)

CONTRAINDICATIONS

Furosemide tablets are contraindicated in patients with anuria and in patients with a history of hypersensitivity to furosemide.

WARNINGS

In patients with hepatic cirrhosis and ascites, furosemide tablets therapy is best initiated in the hospital. In hepatic coma and in states of electrolyte depletion, therapy should not be instituted until the basic condition is improved. Sudden alterations of fluid and electrolyte balance in patients with cirrhosis may precipitate hepatic coma; therefore, strict observation is necessary during the period of diuresis. Supplemental potassium chloride and, if required, an aldosterone antagonist are helpful in preventing hypokalemia and metabolic alkalosis. If increasing azotemia and oliguria occur during treatment of severe progressive renal disease, furosemide tablets should be discontinued. Cases of tinnitus and reversible or irreversible hearing impairment have been reported. Usually, reports indicate that furosemide ototoxicity is associated with rapid injection, severe renal impairment, doses exceeding several times the usual recommended dose, or concomitant therapy with aminoglycoside antibiotics, ethacrynic acid, or other ototoxic drugs. If the physician elects to use high dose parenteral therapy, controlled intravenous infusion is advisable (for adults, an infusion rate not exceeding 4 mg furosemide per minute has been used).

Directions And Dosage

OVERDOSAGE

The principal signs and symptoms of overdose with furosemide are dehydration, blood volume reduction, hypotension, electrolyte imbalance, hypokalemia and hypochloremic alkalosis, and are extensions of its diuretic action. The acute toxicity of furosemide has been determined in mice, rats and dogs. In all three, the oral LD 50 exceeded 1000 mg/kg body weight, while the intravenous LD 50 ranged from 300 to 680 mg/kg. The acute intragastric toxicity in neonatal rats is 7 to 10 times that of adult rats. The concentration of furosemide in biological fluids associated with toxicity or death is not known. Treatment of overdosage is supportive and consists of replacement of excessive fluid and electrolyte losses. Serum electrolytes, carbon dioxide level and blood pressure should be determined frequently. Adequate drainage must be assured in patients with urinary bladder outlet obstruction (such as prostatic hypertrophy). Hemodialysis does not accelerate furosemide elimination.

DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION

Edema Therapy should be individualized according to patient response to gain maximal therapeutic response and to determine the minimal dose needed to maintain that response. Adults -- The usual initial dose of furosemide is 20 to 80 mg given as a single dose. Ordinarily a prompt diuresis ensues. If needed, the same dose can be administered 6 to 8 hours later or the dose may be increased. The dose may be raised by 20 or 40 mg and given not sooner than 6 to 8 hours after the previous dose until the desired diuretic effect has been obtained. The individually determined single dose should then be given once or twice daily (e.g., at 8 am and 2 pm). The dose of furosemide tablets may be carefully titrated up to 600 mg/day in patients with clinically severe edematous states. Edema may be most efficiently and safely mobilized by giving furosemide on 2 to 4 consecutive days each week. When doses exceeding 80 mg/day are given for prolonged periods, careful clinical observation and laboratory monitoring are particularly advisable. (See PRECAUTIONS: Laboratory Tests.) Geriatric patients – In general, dose selection for the elderly patient should be cautious, usually starting at the low end of the dosing range (see PRECAUTIONS: Geriatric Use ). Pediatric patients -- The usual initial dose of furosemide in pediatric patients is 2 mg/kg body weight, given as a single dose. If the diuretic response is not satisfactory after the initial dose, dosage may be increased by 1 or 2 mg/kg no sooner than 6 to 8 hours after the previous dose. Doses greater than 6 mg/kg body weight are not recommended. For maintenance therapy in pediatric patients, the dose should be adjusted to the minimum effective level. Hypertension Therapy should be individualized according to the patient’s response to gain maximal therapeutic response and to determine the minimal dose needed to maintain the therapeutic response. Adults -- The usual initial dose of furosemide tablets for hypertension is 80 mg, usually divided into 40 mg twice a day. Dosage should then be adjusted according to response. If response is not satisfactory, add other antihypertensive agents. Changes in blood pressure must be carefully m...

Other Label Information

Label image for 80mg

Label Images#

Image001
Image001
Furosemide 80mg(Ranbaxy)
Furosemide 80mg(Ranbaxy)

DailyMed RxNorm Mappings#

RxCUI, RxNorm string, TTY table
RxCUIRxNorm stringTTYSPL version
197732furosemide 80 MG Oral TabletPSN1
197732furosemide 80 MG Oral TabletSCD1

DailyMed Pharmacologic Classes#

Class, Version, Type table
ClassVersionTypeEffective
FUROSEMIDE Pharmacologic Class Indexing2Indexing - Pharmacologic Class20180813

DailyMed Product Concepts#

Product concept, Relation, Version table
Product conceptRelationVersionEffective
d80d3aff-3a63-4d7b-a2be-fd9388b04330Product name920250806
9061e89f-9c86-4196-b34b-886fc1673cc4Product name120140821

FDA-Initiated Inactive NDC Indexing#

NDC, Effective, Action table
NDCEffectiveActionDocumentIndexing SPLRelated label
53808-0998-12019-10-21C16284748780-1956f9ecf-cb79-621f-e053-dbdaa90a74adFUROSEMIDE TABLETS, USP Rx only

DailyMed Package Descriptions#

Package NDC, Product, Description table
Package NDCProductDescriptionFormQuantityStrengthSPL version
53808-0998-1Furosemide30 in 1 BLISTER PACKTABLET301

DailyMed Dashboard NDC Coverage#

NDC, Dashboard title, SPL version table
NDCDashboard titleSPL versionValidationDashboard ZIP
53808-0998FUROSEMIDE TABLET [STATE OF FLORIDA DOH CENTRAL PHARMACY]1Legacy NDC, 1 package rows20100611_a6fce940-8009-4f80-99dc-a67be052d45a.zip

DailyMed Billing Units#

Package NDC, Billing unit, Product NDC table
Package NDCBilling unitProduct NDCDailyMed indexing SPLSPL versionEffective
63304-626-01EA - Each63304-626721be378-e6f6-4778-97f9-60ebd3f6ab4912012-07-24
63304-626-05EA - Each63304-6263d0b396e-bdd5-45a7-ba75-578766a23ae212012-07-24

DailyMed Socrata Ingredients#

Ingredient, Type, UNII table
IngredientTypeUNIISPL versionUploaded
FUROSEMIDEACTIVE INGREDIENT7LXU5N7ZO51
FUROSEMIDEACTIVE MOIETY7LXU5N7ZO51
LACTOSE MONOHYDRATEINACTIVE INGREDIENTEWQ57Q8I5X1
MAGNESIUM STEARATEINACTIVE INGREDIENT70097M6I301
SODIUM STARCH GLYCOLATE TYPE A POTATOINACTIVE INGREDIENT5856J3G2A21
STARCH, CORNINACTIVE INGREDIENTO8232NY3SJ1

NDC Codes#

Product NDC, Package NDC table
Product NDCPackage NDC
53808-099853808-0998-1
63304-626

Ingredients#

Complete SPL Sections#

WARNING

BOXED WARNING SECTION

Furosemide is a potent diuretic which, if given in excessive amounts, can lead to a profound diuresis with water and electrolyte depletion. Therefore, careful medical supervision is required and dose and dose schedule must be adjusted to the individual patient’s needs. (See “DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION”.)

DESCRIPTION

DESCRIPTION SECTION

Furosemide is a diuretic which is an anthranilic acid derivative. Furosemide tablets, USP for oral administration contain furosemide, USP as the active ingredient and the following inactive ingredients: corn starch NF, lactose monohydrate NF, magnesium stearate NF, pregelatinized starch NF and sodium starch glycolate NF. Chemically, it is 4-chloro-N-furfuryl-5-sulfamoylanthranilic acid. Furosemide is available as white to off white round tablets for oral administration in dosage strengths of 20, 40 and 80 mg. Furosemide is a white to off-white granular powder. It is practically insoluble in water, sparingly soluble in alcohol, freely soluble in dilute alkali solutions and insoluble in dilute acids. The CAS Registry Number is 54-31-9. It has a molecular formula of C 12 H 11 ClN 2 O 5 S and a molecular weight of 330.75. The structural formula is as follows:

CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY

CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY SECTION

Investigations into the mode of action of furosemide have utilized micropuncture studies in rats, stop flow experiments in dogs and various clearance studies in both humans and experimental animals. It has been demonstrated that furosemide inhibits primarily the absorption of sodium and chloride not only in the proximal and distal tubules but also in the loop of Henle. The high degree of efficacy is largely due to the unique site of action. The action on the distal tubule is independent of any inhibitory effect on carbonic anhydrase and aldosterone. Recent evidence suggests that furosemide glucuronide is the only or at least the major biotransformation product of furosemide in man. Furosemide is extensively bound to plasma proteins, mainly to albumin. Plasma concentrations ranging from 1 to 400 mcg/mL are 91 to 99% bound in healthy individuals. The unbound fraction averages 2.3 to 4.1% at therapeutic concentrations. The onset of diuresis following oral administration is within 1 hour. The peak effect occurs within the first or second hour. The duration of diuretic effect is 6 to 8 hours. In fasted normal men, the mean bioavailability of furosemide from furosemide tablets and furosemide oral solution is 64% and 60%, respectively, of that from an intravenous injection of the drug. Although furosemide is more rapidly absorbed from the oral solution (50 minutes) than from the tablet (87 minutes), peak plasma levels and area under the plasma concentration-time curves do not differ significantly. Peak plasma concentrations increase with increasing dose but times-to-peak do not differ among doses. The terminal half-life of furosemide is approximately 2 hours. Significantly more furosemide is excreted in urine following the IV injection than after the tablet or oral solution. There are no significant differences between the two oral formulations in the amount of unchanged drug excreted in urine. Geriatric Population Furosemide binding to albumin may be reduced in elderly patients. Furosemide is predominantly excreted unchanged in the urine. The renal clearance of furosemide alter intravenous administration in older healthy male subjects (60 to 70 years of age) is statistically significantly smaller than in younger healthy male subjects (20 to 35 years of age). The initial diuretic effect of furosemide in older subjects is decreased relative to younger subjects. (See PRECAUTIONS: Geriatric Use.)

INDICATIONS AND USAGE

INDICATIONS & USAGE SECTION

Edema Furosemide tablets are indicated in adults and pediatric patients for the treatment of edema associated with congestive heart failure, cirrhosis of the liver, and renal disease, including the nephrotic syndrome. Furosemide is particularly useful when an agent with greater diuretic potential is desired. Hypertension Furosemide tablets may be used in adults for the treatment of hypertension alone or in combination with other antihypertensive agents. Hypertensive patients who cannot be adequately controlled with thiazides will probably also not be adequately controlled with furosemide alone.

CONTRAINDICATIONS

CONTRAINDICATIONS SECTION

Furosemide tablets are contraindicated in patients with anuria and in patients with a history of hypersensitivity to furosemide.

WARNINGS

WARNINGS SECTION

In patients with hepatic cirrhosis and ascites, furosemide tablets therapy is best initiated in the hospital. In hepatic coma and in states of electrolyte depletion, therapy should not be instituted until the basic condition is improved. Sudden alterations of fluid and electrolyte balance in patients with cirrhosis may precipitate hepatic coma; therefore, strict observation is necessary during the period of diuresis. Supplemental potassium chloride and, if required, an aldosterone antagonist are helpful in preventing hypokalemia and metabolic alkalosis. If increasing azotemia and oliguria occur during treatment of severe progressive renal disease, furosemide tablets should be discontinued. Cases of tinnitus and reversible or irreversible hearing impairment have been reported. Usually, reports indicate that furosemide ototoxicity is associated with rapid injection, severe renal impairment, doses exceeding several times the usual recommended dose, or concomitant therapy with aminoglycoside antibiotics, ethacrynic acid, or other ototoxic drugs. If the physician elects to use high dose parenteral therapy, controlled intravenous infusion is advisable (for adults, an infusion rate not exceeding 4 mg furosemide per minute has been used).

PRECAUTIONS

PRECAUTIONS SECTION

ADVERSE REACTIONS

ADVERSE REACTIONS SECTION

Gastrointestinal System Reactions 1. pancreatitis 2. jaundice (intrahepatic cholestatic jaundice) 3. anorexia 4. oral and gastric irritation 5. cramping 6. diarrhea 7. constipation 8. nausea 9. vomiting Systemic Hypersensitivity Reactions 1. systemic vasculitis 2. interstitial nephritis 3. necrotizing angiitis Central Nervous System Reactions 1. tinnitus and hearing loss 2. paresthesias 3. vertigo 4. dizziness 5. headache 6. blurred vision 7. xanthopsia Hematologic Reactions 1. aplastic anemia (rare) 2. thrombocytopenia 3. agranulocytosis (rare) 4. hemolytic anemia 5. leukopenia 6. anemia Dermatologic-Hypersensitivity Reactions 1. exfoliative dermatitis 2. erythema multiforme 3. purpura 4. photosensitivity 5. urticaria 6. rash 7. pruritus Cardiovascular Reaction Orthostatic hypotension may occur and be aggravated by alcohol, barbiturates or narcotics. Other Reactions 1. hyperglycemia 2. glycosuria 3. hyperuricemia 4. muscle spasm 5. weakness 6. restlessness 7. urinary bladder spasm 8. thrombophlebitis 9. fever Whenever adverse reactions are moderate or severe, furosemide dosage should be reduced or therapy withdrawn.

OVERDOSAGE

OVERDOSAGE SECTION

The principal signs and symptoms of overdose with furosemide are dehydration, blood volume reduction, hypotension, electrolyte imbalance, hypokalemia and hypochloremic alkalosis, and are extensions of its diuretic action. The acute toxicity of furosemide has been determined in mice, rats and dogs. In all three, the oral LD 50 exceeded 1000 mg/kg body weight, while the intravenous LD 50 ranged from 300 to 680 mg/kg. The acute intragastric toxicity in neonatal rats is 7 to 10 times that of adult rats. The concentration of furosemide in biological fluids associated with toxicity or death is not known. Treatment of overdosage is supportive and consists of replacement of excessive fluid and electrolyte losses. Serum electrolytes, carbon dioxide level and blood pressure should be determined frequently. Adequate drainage must be assured in patients with urinary bladder outlet obstruction (such as prostatic hypertrophy). Hemodialysis does not accelerate furosemide elimination.

DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION

DOSAGE & ADMINISTRATION SECTION

Edema Therapy should be individualized according to patient response to gain maximal therapeutic response and to determine the minimal dose needed to maintain that response. Adults -- The usual initial dose of furosemide is 20 to 80 mg given as a single dose. Ordinarily a prompt diuresis ensues. If needed, the same dose can be administered 6 to 8 hours later or the dose may be increased. The dose may be raised by 20 or 40 mg and given not sooner than 6 to 8 hours after the previous dose until the desired diuretic effect has been obtained. The individually determined single dose should then be given once or twice daily (e.g., at 8 am and 2 pm). The dose of furosemide tablets may be carefully titrated up to 600 mg/day in patients with clinically severe edematous states. Edema may be most efficiently and safely mobilized by giving furosemide on 2 to 4 consecutive days each week. When doses exceeding 80 mg/day are given for prolonged periods, careful clinical observation and laboratory monitoring are particularly advisable. (See PRECAUTIONS: Laboratory Tests.) Geriatric patients – In general, dose selection for the elderly patient should be cautious, usually starting at the low end of the dosing range (see PRECAUTIONS: Geriatric Use ). Pediatric patients -- The usual initial dose of furosemide in pediatric patients is 2 mg/kg body weight, given as a single dose. If the diuretic response is not satisfactory after the initial dose, dosage may be increased by 1 or 2 mg/kg no sooner than 6 to 8 hours after the previous dose. Doses greater than 6 mg/kg body weight are not recommended. For maintenance therapy in pediatric patients, the dose should be adjusted to the minimum effective level. Hypertension Therapy should be individualized according to the patient’s response to gain maximal therapeutic response and to determine the minimal dose needed to maintain the therapeutic response. Adults -- The usual initial dose of furosemide tablets for hypertension is 80 mg, usually divided into 40 mg twice a day. Dosage should then be adjusted according to response. If response is not satisfactory, add other antihypertensive agents. Changes in blood pressure must be carefully monitored when furosemide tablets are used with other antihypertensive drugs, especially during initial therapy. To prevent excessive drop in blood pressure, the dosage of other agents should be reduced by at least 50 percent when furosemide tablets are added to the regimen. As the blood pressure falls under the potentiating effect of furosemide tablets, a further reduction in dosage or even discontinuation of other antihypertensive drugs may be necessary. Geriatric patients – In general, dose selection and dose adjustment for the elderly patient should be cautious, usually starting at the low end of the dosing range (see PRECAUTIONS: Geriatric Use ).

HOW SUPPLIED

HOW SUPPLIED SECTION

Furosemide Tablets, USP 20 mg, 40 mg and 80 mg are supplied as white to off-white, round tablets. Furosemide Tablets, USP 20 mg are debossed with ‘RE22’ on one side and plain on the other side. Furosemide Tablets, USP 40 mg are debossed with ‘RE23’ on one side and break-line on the other side. Furosemide Tablets, USP 80 mg are debossed with ‘RE24’ on one side and break-line on the other side. They are supplied by State of Florida DOH Central Pharmacy as follows: NDC Strength Quantity/Form Color Source Prod. Code 53808-0998-1 80 mg 30 Tablets in a Blister Pack white to off-white 63304-626 Note: Dispense in well-closed, light-resistant containers. Exposure to light might cause a slight discoloration. Discolored tablets should not be dispensed. Tested by USP Dissolution Test 1 Store at 20 – 25° C (68 – 77° F). (See USP Controlled Room Temperature). Manufactured for: Ranbaxy Pharmaceuticals Inc. Jacksonville, FL 32257 USA by: Ohm Laboratories Inc. North Brunswick, NJ 08902 USA This Product was Repackaged By: State of Florida DOH Central Pharmacy 104-2 Hamilton Park Drive Tallahassee, FL 32304 United States

Label image for 80mg

PACKAGE LABEL.PRINCIPAL DISPLAY PANEL

Source Document#

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