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Syrup

Adferon 200 mg/5 ml Syrup

Generic: Ferrous Sulphate

Manufacturer: Team Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

Therapeutic class: Iron supplement (anti-anaemic)

What is Adferon?

Adferon 200 mg/5 ml syrup from Team Pharmaceuticals Ltd. contains Ferrous Sulphate, an iron salt used to prevent and treat iron-deficiency anaemia. Iron deficiency is very common in Bangladesh — especially among women, adolescent girls and children — and shows up as tiredness, pale skin, breathlessness on exertion and poor concentration. Adferon replenishes the body's iron so that healthy red blood cells can be made again.

Iron is the central building block of haemoglobin, the protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen from the lungs to every organ. When iron stores run low, the body cannot make enough haemoglobin and the blood carries less oxygen, causing the symptoms of anaemia. Ferrous Sulphate supplies absorbable iron to the gut; the body uses it to rebuild haemoglobin and refill iron stores over several weeks to months.

Indications

Adferon is used for:

  • Treatment of iron-deficiency anaemia — due to poor dietary intake, blood loss (heavy periods, piles, hookworm), or increased demand
  • Prevention of iron deficiency — in pregnancy and breastfeeding, adolescent girls, frequent blood donors and growing children, as advised
  • Recovery after blood loss — surgery, childbirth or injury, when the doctor recommends iron

Anaemia has many causes, so it is best to confirm iron deficiency with a doctor before long-term use.

Dosage & Administration

Adults (treatment): a commonly used dose of Adferon is one tablet (typically 200 mg ferrous sulphate, about 60–65 mg elemental iron) once to three times daily, as the doctor advises. Prevention usually needs only once daily.

  • Iron absorbs best on an empty stomach, but if it upsets your stomach, take it after a small meal.
  • Keep a 2-hour gap from tea, coffee, milk, antacids and calcium — they block absorption. Vitamin C (lemon, guava, amla, orange) helps absorption.
  • Treatment usually continues for about 3 months after haemoglobin becomes normal to refill iron stores — your doctor decides the duration.
  • Children: dose strictly by the doctor, based on weight; use drops/syrup as directed.

Side Effects

Common, usually harmless effects of Adferon include:

  • Black or dark stools — this is normal with iron and not a cause for alarm
  • Nausea, stomach discomfort or heartburn
  • Constipation, or sometimes loose stools
  • Metallic taste in the mouth
  • Temporary staining of teeth with liquid forms (use a straw and rinse the mouth)

Taking the dose with a little food, increasing fluids and fibre, or splitting the dose usually helps. However, black stools with severe stomach pain, vomiting of blood, or sticky tar-like stools with weakness need urgent medical review.

Precautions & Warnings

  • Keep strictly out of children's reach — accidental iron overdose is one of the most dangerous poisonings in young children. If a child swallows iron tablets, go to a hospital immediately.
  • Do not take iron long term without confirming iron deficiency — anaemia can have other causes (e.g., thalassaemia, chronic disease) where extra iron may be harmful.
  • Tell your doctor if you have ulcers, inflammatory bowel disease, repeated blood transfusions, thalassaemia or liver disease.
  • Keep a 2-hour gap from tea, coffee, milk, calcium and antacids.
  • Remember black stools are expected — but report severe abdominal symptoms.
  • If haemoglobin does not improve after 3–4 weeks, see your doctor to look for the underlying cause (e.g., bleeding, worms).

Drug Interactions

Ferrous Sulphate interacts with several medicines and foods:

  • Tea, coffee, milk and calcium — strongly reduce iron absorption; keep a 2-hour gap.
  • Antacids and acid-reducing medicines (omeprazole group) — reduce absorption.
  • Tetracycline and quinolone antibiotics (doxycycline, ciprofloxacin) — iron blocks their absorption too; separate by 2–4 hours.
  • Levothyroxine — absorption reduced; take at least 4 hours apart.
  • Vitamin C — improves iron absorption (helpful interaction).
  • Other iron-containing multivitamins — avoid unintentional doubling.

Contraindications

  • Known allergy to Ferrous Sulphate or any component of the preparation
  • Iron-overload conditions — haemochromatosis, haemosiderosis
  • Anaemia that is not due to iron deficiency (e.g., thalassaemia without deficiency, haemolytic anaemia) unless the doctor confirms a deficiency
  • Patients receiving repeated blood transfusions — only on specialist advice
  • Active peptic ulcer or inflammatory bowel disease flare — use with medical guidance

Pregnancy & Lactation

Iron is commonly recommended in pregnancy, when the body's demand rises sharply; Ferrous Sulphate is widely used and considered safe at recommended doses, often together with folic acid as part of antenatal care. It is also safe during breastfeeding at usual doses. Even so, take Adferon in pregnancy according to your doctor's advice, and avoid taking multiple iron products at the same time.

Storage Conditions

Store Adferon below 30°C in a dry place, protected from light and moisture. Iron tablets can look like sweets to children — keep them tightly closed and strictly out of children's reach. Do not use after the expiry date.

Frequently Asked Questions

My stools have turned black since starting Adferon — should I worry?

<p>No — black or dark-green stools are an expected, harmless effect of iron and simply show the unabsorbed portion passing through. You should only worry if black stools come with severe stomach pain, look sticky like tar, or are accompanied by vomiting blood or marked weakness — those can signal bleeding and need urgent medical review. Otherwise, continue Adferon as prescribed.</p>

Why can't I take Adferon with tea or milk?

<p>The tannins in tea and coffee and the calcium in milk bind iron in the gut and can cut its absorption dramatically, so the medicine works far less well. Take Adferon at least 2 hours away from tea, coffee, milk, calcium tablets and antacids. Taking it with vitamin C–rich food or drink — lemon water, guava, amla or orange — actually improves absorption.</p>

How long do I need to take Adferon before my anaemia improves?

<p>You may feel more energetic within 1–2 weeks, and haemoglobin typically starts rising within 2–4 weeks. However, correcting anaemia fully and refilling the body's iron stores takes longer — treatment usually continues for about 3 months after haemoglobin becomes normal. Do not stop early just because you feel better, and have your blood rechecked as your doctor advises.</p>

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