Path 15mg Tablet
Lupin Ltd

prescription required

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In-stock 10 tablets in 1 strip
49.50

NOTICE: unsafe with : Alcohol

USED FOR:
Type 2 diabetes

COMPOSITION:
Pioglitazone (15mg)

Therapeutic Uses:
anti diabetic

Related Warnings
CAUTION
Alcohol
CAUTION

Taking pioglitazone with alcohol may affect blood glucose levels in patients with diabetes.

WEIGH RISKS VS BENEFITS
Pregnancy
WEIGH RISKS VS BENEFITS

Path 15mg Tablet may be unsafe to use during pregnancy.Animal studies have shown adverse effects on the foetus, however, there are limited human studies. The benefits from use in pregnant women may be acceptable despite the risk. Please consult your doctor.

Lactation

Path 15mg Tablet is probably safe to use during lactation. Limited human data suggests that the drug does not represent a significant risk to the baby.Monitor the breastfed baby’s blood sugar during treatment with Path 15mg Tablet

SAFE
Driving
SAFE

Path 15mg Tablet does not usually affect your ability to drive.

SAFE
Kidney
SAFE

Path 15mg Tablet is safe to use in patients with kidney disease. No dose adjustment of Path 15mg Tablet is recommended.Use of Path 15mg Tablet is not recommended in patients undergoing dialysis.

CAUTION
Liver
CAUTION

Path 15mg Tablet should be used with caution in patients with liver disease. Dose adjustment of Path 15mg Tablet may be needed. Please consult your doctor.Use of Path 15mg Tablet is not recommended in patients with severe liver disease.

Pioglitazone   15mg

Uses of Path Tablet
Path 15mg Tablet is used in the treatment of type 2 diabetesIt is used in addition to diet and exercise to improve blood sugar control in adults with type 2 diabetes.

How to use Path Tablet
Take this medicine in the dose and duration as advised by your doctor. Swallow it as a whole. Do not chew, crush or break it. Path 15mg Tablet may be taken with or without food, but it is better to take it at a fixed time.

How Path Tablet works
Path 15mg Tablet is an anti-diabetic medication. It works by increasing the body's sensitivity to insulin, a natural substance that helps control blood sugar levels.

Side Effects:

Common Weight gain, Blurred vision, Respiratory tract infection, Numbness, Bone fracture.

Expert advice for Path Tablet
Path helps to control blood sugar level and avoids long-term complications. You should continue to exercise regularly, eat a healthy diet, and take your other diabetes medicines along with Path. Full effect may be visible after several weeks of starting Path. Weight gain, headache, and swelling due to fluid build-up may occur. Notify your doctor if you experience shortness of breath, heart problems, or any abnormal swelling. May not be suitable for patients with a history of heart failure or bladder cancer.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. Is Path a blood thinner?
No. Path is an anti-diabetic medication. Blood thinners are the medicine that prevents the formation of a harmful blood clot. These include medicines like Aspirin, Heparin and Warfarin.

Q. Is Path a diuretic?
No. Path is not a diuretic. It is used in the treatment of Diabetes Mellitus. Diuretics are those medicine which increases urination.

Q. Can Path used in Hepatitis B infection?
Some studies have shown that Path may be helpful in preventing Hepatitis B Virus-associated Hepatocellular Cancer (Liver Cancer). However, these findings are still very preliminary and clear role has not been established.

Q. Can Path used in Hepatitis C infection?
Path has been shown to inhibit Liver Cancer (HCC) recurrence in overweight Hepatitis C Virus-infected diabetic patients. It also improved insulin resistance (a state where the body is resistant to the effects and functions of the insulin hormone) in them.

Q. Can Path used along with Vitamin D?
Studies indicate that Vitamin-D combined with Path may be more effective in improving Bone Mineral Density and Bone Metabolism than Vitamin-D or Path alone in the treatment of Diabetes Mellitus patients with kidney dysfunction (Diabetic Nephropathy).

Q. Can Path be used along with sitagliptin?
Combination therapy with Sitagliptin and Path leads to a substantial and sustained improvement in glycemic (blood sugar) control compared to the treatment with Path alone. This is useful for patients who cannot tolerate Metformin or Sulfonylureas.

Q. Is there any role of Path in Alzheimer disease?
Recent evidence suggests that Path may be beneficial in Alzheimer's disease (AD), decreasing the cognitive decline early in the disease process. However, larger studies are now in progress to establish the same.

Q. Can Path and repaglinide combined in diabetes treatment?
For patients who previously failed oral antidiabetic therapy, the combination of Repaglinide and Path have acceptable safety, with greater reductions of glycemic parameters (blood sugar levels) than using either agent alone.

Q. Does Path cause urinary bladder tumour?
Large population studies indicate that Path is associated with an increased risk of bladder cancer. The absence of an association of bladder cancer with the other drug of the same class, Rosiglitazone, suggests that the increased risk is drug specific and not a class effect.

Q. Are Path and rosiglitazone same?
Path & Rosiglitazone both belong to a class of antidiabetics called Thiazolidinediones. Rosiglitazone has been removed from the market because using this drug was associated with increased risk of cardiovascular events like heart attack and stroke. This is not seen with Path.

Q. Can Path be used along with glimepiride in diabetes?
Path when added to Glimepiride in Patients with Diabetes Mellitus, has been found to significantly reduce plasma lipid levels and significant improvement in blood pressure control related to a reduction in the insulin resistance.

Q. Is Path a steroid?
No. Path is not a steroid. It is an anti-diabetic medication which belongs to the class of thiazolidinediones.

Q. How to use Path?
Path is an anti-diabetes drug used along with a proper diet and exercise program to control high blood sugar in patients with type 2 diabetes. Path acts as an insulin sensitizer and decreases the extent of insulin resistance in the body too.

Q. How safe is Path?
Path cardiovascular safety profile compares favourably with that of Rosiglitazone. Path has been found to be associated with bladder tumours but causality assessment has not been proved yet.

Q. How does Path cause oedema?
Path increases the permeability of fluid in tiny blood vessels called capillaries. This results in easier movement of fluids across the membrane and their consequent accumulation, resulting in oedema (puffiness). Also, Path causes increased sodium and water reabsorption from the kidney that contributes to the oedema.

Q. How does Path cause bladder cancer?
The mechanism behind the link between Path use and bladder cancer is still unknown. Studies have suggested that use of Path for more than one year results in increased risk of development of tumour of the urinary bladder.

Q. How does Path cause heart failure?
Path can cause fluid retention and edema. Consequently, there is a lot of fluid in the body (fluid overload). As a result, it may precipitate heart failure (which worsens with fluid overload in those at risk).

Q. How Path protects against atherosclerosis?
Studies in animals have concluded that Path improves the elasticity of the aortic wall ( the aorta is a large blood vessel that arises from the heart and supplies oxygenated blood to the rest of the body). This may be a mechanism by which it protects against atherosclerosis, but more studies are needed to confirm this.

Q. Can Path be used with insulin?
The addition of Path reduces daily insulin dosages, but study findings have not been consistent. Improvement of lipid profiles has also been weak with this combination therapy. Long-term studies are needed before any conclusions can be reached. Combination therapy should be primarily used for patients who achieve an insufficient reduction in blood sugar with insulin alone.

Q. Which is not safe in heart failure, Path or rosiglitazone?
Path & Rosiglitazone both belong to a class of antidiabetics called Thiazolidinediones. Rosiglitazone has been removed from the market because using this drug was associated with increased risk of cardiovascular events like heart attack and stroke. Path can cause heart failure too, but the risk is less that that with Rosiglitazone. Both the medicines should be avoided in heart failure.

Q. What are the alternatives to Path?
Fortunately, there are many alternatives to Path- Metformin, Acarbose, Sitagliptin, Exenatide, Insulin or combination therapies of these medicines can be used.

Q. Can Path used for dementia?
Findings indicate that Path treatment is associated with a reduced dementia risk in Diabetes mellitus patients. Prospective studies are needed to evaluate a possible neuroprotective effect in these patients in an ageing population.

Q. Can Path used for infertility?
Path may be of use in infertile patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) who are resistant to conventional ovulation induction such as by drugs like Clomiphene, Dexamethasone, or Metformin.

Q. Can Path used for psoriasis?
The use of Path for plaque psoriasis treatment is controversial. Some studies revealed no effect of Path 30 mg daily neither on the clinical response of moderate-to-severe psoriasis whereas others demonstrate that it could be considered as an efficacious and safe agent for the treatment of plaque psoriasis.

Q. Can Path used for autism?
In a research study in a small number of autistic children, daily treatment with 30 or 60 mg Path for 3–4 months induced apparent clinical improvement. Path should be considered for further testing of therapeutic potential in autistic patients but as of now, autism is not an approved indication for Path use.

Q. Can Path be used in depression?
Path, either alone or as add-on therapy to conventional treatments, could clinically benefit patients of major depression according to a study.

Q. Can Path used for weight loss?
A recent study shows that although Path causes a significant decrease in blood sugar, HbA1C and lipid levels, it is associated with weight gain, which would limit its utility. It has not been shown to cause weight loss.

Q. Can Path be used to treat fatty liver?
Path has also been used to treat non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (fatty liver), but this use is presently considered experimental.

Q. Can Path be used for secondary stroke prevention?
Path reduces recurrent stroke and major vascular events in stroke patients with insulin resistance, prediabetes, and diabetes mellitus. However, its use as a preventive therapy requires more research.