Product Elements:
Cyanocobalamin cyanocobalamin water benzyl alcohol sodium chloride hydrochloric acid sodium hydroxide cyanocobalamin cyanocobalamin
Indications and Usage:
Indications and usage cyanocobalamin is indicated for vitamin b 12 deficiencies due to malabsorption which may be associated with the following conditions: ⢠addisonian (pernicious) anemia ⢠gastrointestinal pathology, dysfunction, or surgery, including gluten enteropathy or sprue, small bowel bacteria overgrowth, total or partial gastrectomy ⢠fish tapeworm infestation ⢠malignancy of pancreas or bowel ⢠folic acid deficiency it may be possible to treat the underlying disease by surgical correction of anatomic lesions leading to small bowel bacterial overgrowth, expulsion of fish tapeworm, discontinuation of drugs leading to vitamin malabsorption (see drug interactions ), use of a gluten-free diet in nontropical sprue, or administration of antibiotics in tropical sprue. such measures remove the need for long-term administration of cyanocobalamin. requirements of vitamin b 12 in excess of normal (due to pregnancy, thyrotoxicosis, hemolytic anemia, hemorrhage, m
Read more...alignancy, hepatic and renal disease) can usually be met with oral supplementation. cyanocobalamin injection is also suitable for the vitamin b 12 absorption test (schilling test).
Warnings:
Warnings patients with early leber's disease (hereditary optic nerve atrophy) who were treated with cyanocobalamin suffered severe and swift optic atrophy. hypokalemia and sudden death may occur in severe megaloblastic anemia which is treated intensely. anaphylactic shock and death have been reported after parenteral vitamin b 12 administration. an intradermal test dose is recommended before cyanocobalamin injection is administered to patients suspected of being sensitive to this drug. this product contains benzyl alcohol. benzyl alcohol has been reported to be associated with a fatal "gasping syndrome" in premature infants. this product contains aluminum that may be toxic. aluminum may reach toxic levels with prolonged parenteral administration if kidney function is impaired. premature neonates are particularly at risk because their kidneys are immature, and they require large amounts of calcium and phosphate solutions, which contain aluminum. research indicates that patients with imp
Read more...aired kidney function, including premature neonates, who receive parenteral levels of aluminum at greater than 4 to 5 mcg/kg/day accumulate aluminum at levels associated with central nervous system and bone toxicity. tissue loading may occur at even lower rates of administration
General Precautions:
General precautions vitamin b 12 deficiency that is allowed to progress for longer than 3 months may produce permanent degenerative lesions of the spinal cord. doses of folic acid greater than 0.1 mg per day may result in hematologic remission in patients with vitamin b 12 deficiency. neurologic manifestations will not be prevented with folic acid, and if not treated with vitamin b 12 , irreversible damage will result. doses of cyanocobalamin exceeding 10 mcg daily may produce hematologic response in patients with folate deficiency. indiscriminate administration may mask the true diagnosis.
Dosage and Administration:
Dosage and administration avoid using the intravenous route. use of this product intravenously will result in almost all of the vitamin being lost in the urine. pernicious anemia: parenteral vitamin b 12 is the recommended treatment and will be required for the remainder of the patient's life. the oral form is not dependable. a dose of 100 mcg daily for 6 or 7 days should be administered by intramuscular or deep subcutaneous injection. if there is clinical improvement and if a reticulocyte response is observed, the same amount may be given on alternate days for seven doses, then every 3 to 4 days for another 2 to 3 weeks. by this time hematologic values should have become normal. this regimen should be followed by 100 mcg monthly for life. folic acid should be administered concomitantly if needed. patients with normal intestinal absorption: where the oral route is not deemed adequate, initial treatment similar to that for patients with pernicious anemia may be indicated depending on th
Read more...e severity of the deficiency. chronic treatment should be with an oral b 12 preparation. if other vitamin deficiencies are present, they should be treated. schilling test: the flushing dose is 1,000 mcg. parenteral drug products should be inspected visually for particulate matter and discoloration prior to administration, whenever solution and container permit.
Contraindications:
Contraindications sensitivity to cobalt and/or vitamin b 12 is a contraindication.
Adverse Reactions:
Adverse reactions generalized: anaphylactic shock and death have been reported with administration of parenteral vitamin b 12 (see warnings ). cardiovascular: pulmonary edema and congestive heart failure early in treatment; peripheral vascular thrombosis. hematological: polycythemia vera gastrointestinal: mild transient diarrhea dermatological: itching; transitory exanthema miscellaneous: feeling of swelling of entire body
Use in Pregnancy:
Pregnancy teratogenic effects: adequate and well-controlled studies have not been done in pregnant women. however, vitamin b 12 is an essential vitamin and requirements are increased during pregnancy. amounts of vitamin b 12 that are recommended by the food and nutrition board, national academy of science-national research council for pregnant women (4 mcg daily) should be consumed during pregnancy.
Pediatric Use:
Pediatric use intake in children should be in the amount (0.5 to 3 mcg daily) recommended by the food and nutrition board, national academy of science-national research council.
Overdosage:
Overdosage no overdosage has been reported with this drug.
Description:
Description cyanocobalamin injection, usp is a sterile solution of cyanocobalamin for intramuscular or subcutaneous injection. each ml contains 1,000 mcg cyanocobalamin. each vial also contains sodium chloride, 0.9%. benzyl alcohol, 1.5%, is present as a preservative. hydrochloric acid and/or sodium hydroxide may have been added during manufacture to adjust the ph (range 4.5 to 7.0). cyanocobalamin, usp appears as red to purplish red, crystalline powder or small crystals. it is very hygroscopic in the anhydrous form, and sparingly soluble in water (1:80). it is stable to autoclaving for short periods at 121°c. the vitamin b 12 coenzymes are very unstable in light. the chemical name is 5,6-dimethyl-benzimidazolyl cyanocobamide; the molecular formula is c 63 h 88 con 14 o 14 p. the cobalt content is 4.34%. the molecular weight is 1355.39. the structural formula is represented below. chemical structure
Clinical Pharmacology:
Clinical pharmacology vitamin b 12 is essential to growth, cell reproduction, hematopoiesis, and nucleoprotein and myelin synthesis. cyanocobalamin is quantitatively and rapidly absorbed from intramuscular and subcutaneous sites of injection; the plasma level of the compound reaches its peak within 1 hour after intramuscular injection. absorbed vitamin b 12 is transported via specific b 12 binding proteins, transcobalamin i and ii to the various tissues. the liver is the main organ for vitamin b 12 storage. within 48 hours after injection of 100 or 1,000 mcg of vitamin b 12 , 50 to 98% of the injected dose may appear in the urine. the major portion is excreted within the first eight hours. intravenous administration results in even more rapid excretion with little opportunity for liver storage. gastrointestinal absorption of vitamin b 12 depends on the presence of sufficient intrinsic factor and calcium ions. intrinsic factor deficiency causes pernicious anemia, which may be associated
Read more... with subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord. prompt parenteral administration of vitamin b 12 prevents progression of neurologic damage. the average diet supplies about 5 to 15 mcg/day of vitamin b 12 in a protein-bound form that is available for absorption after normal digestion. vitamin b 12 is not present in foods of plant origin, but is abundant in foods of animal origin. in people with normal absorption, deficiencies have been reported only in strict vegetarians who consume no products of animal origin (including no milk products or eggs). vitamin b 12 is bound to intrinsic factor during transit through the stomach; separation occurs in the terminal ileum in the presence of calcium, and vitamin b 12 enters the mucosal cell for absorption. it is then transported by the transcobalamin binding proteins. a small amount (approximately 1% of the total amount ingested) is absorbed by simple diffusion, but this mechanism is adequate only with very large doses. oral absorption is considered too undependable to rely on in patients with pernicious anemia or other conditions resulting in malabsorption of vitamin b 12 . cyanocobalamin is the most widely used form of vitamin b 12 , and has hematopoietic activity apparently identical to that of the antianemia factor in purified liver extract. hydroxycobalamin is equally as effective as cyanocobalamin, and they share the cobalamin molecular structure.
Carcinogenesis and Mutagenesis and Impairment of Fertility:
Carcinogenesis, mutagenesis, impairment of fertility long term studies in animals to evaluate carcinogenic potential have not been done. there is no evidence from long-term use in patients with pernicious anemia that cyanocobalamin is carcinogenic. pernicious anemia is associated with an increased incidence of carcinoma of the stomach, but this is believed to be related to the underlying pathology and not to treatment with cyanocobalamin.
How Supplied:
How supplied cyanocobalamin injection, usp 1,000 mcg/ml is a clear dark red color solution, and is supplied as follows: ndc number cyanocobalamin injection, usp volume 68001-509-59 1,000 mcg/ml 1 ml vial 68001-509-60 a pack of 25 vials store at 20° to 25°c (68° to 77°f) [see usp controlled room temperature]. protect the product from light. the vial stopper is not made with natural rubber latex. manufactured by: eugia pharma specialities limited hyderabad - 502307 india for bluepoint laboratories revised: november 2021
Information for Patients:
Information for patients patients with pernicious anemia should be informed that they will require monthly injections of vitamin b 12 for the remainder of their lives. failure to do so will result in return of the anemia and in development of incapacitating and irreversible damage to the nerves of the spinal cord. also, patients should be warned about the danger of taking folic acid in place of vitamin b 12 , because the former may prevent anemia but allow progression of subacute combined degeneration. a vegetarian diet which contains no animal products (including milk products or eggs) does not supply any vitamin b 12 . patients following such a diet, should be advised to take oral vitamin b 12 regularly. the need for vitamin b 12 is increased by pregnancy and lactation. deficiency has been recognized in infants of vegetarian mothers who were breast fed, even though the mothers had no symptoms of deficiency at the time.
Package Label Principal Display Panel:
Package label-principal display panel - 1,000 mcg per ml - container label rx only ndc 68001-509-59 cyanocobalamin injection, usp 1,000 mcg per ml for im or sc use only 1 ml vial vial label
Package label-principal display panel - 1,000 mcg per ml â container-carton (25 vials) rx only ndc 68001-509-60 cyanocobalamin injection, usp 1,000 mcg per ml for intramuscular or subcutaneous use only 25 x 1 ml vials carton label