Tablet
Anxitas 10 mg Tablet
Generic: Clobazam
Manufacturer: Kumudini Pharma Ltd.
Therapeutic class: Benzodiazepine Anticonvulsant / Anxiolytic
What is Anxitas?
Anxitas 10 mg tablet is manufactured by Kumudini Pharma Ltd. and contains Clobazam, a benzodiazepine used mainly as an add-on (adjunct) treatment for epilepsy that is not fully controlled by other medicines, and occasionally for severe anxiety on a short-term basis. Compared with older benzodiazepines it tends to cause somewhat less daytime sedation, which is why it is favoured in epilepsy care — but as a benzodiazepine it still carries a real risk of dependence and must be used exactly as prescribed.
Clobazam works by enhancing GABA, the brain's natural calming chemical messenger. This raises the brain's seizure threshold — making abnormal electrical discharges less likely to spread — and at the same time reduces anxiety and relaxes muscles.
Indications
Doctors prescribe Anxitas for:
- Epilepsy — adjunctive treatment: added to other anti-seizure medicines when seizures are not fully controlled, in adults and children over a specialist-decided age, including in Lennox-Gastaut syndrome
- Catamenial (menstruation-related) seizures — sometimes used intermittently around the period, on specialist advice
- Severe acute anxiety — short-term use only, when a doctor judges a benzodiazepine necessary
Anxitas is prescription-only and, in epilepsy, should be managed by a neurologist. It is not a medicine to start, stop or adjust on your own.
Dosage & Administration
Anxitas is strictly prescription-only; the dose below is general information and your doctor will individualise it:
- Epilepsy (adults): often started at 5–10 mg daily, increased gradually; usual maintenance 10–30 mg daily, sometimes divided, with the larger part at night.
- Children: lower, weight-based doses set by the specialist.
- Elderly and liver/kidney impairment: smaller doses, slower increases.
- Anxiety: lowest effective dose for the shortest time — generally no more than 2–4 weeks including tapering.
Never stop Anxitas suddenly. In epilepsy, abrupt withdrawal can trigger rebound seizures, including continuous seizures (status epilepticus); after regular use it can also cause anxiety, tremor and sleeplessness. Any reduction must be slow and supervised by your doctor. Avoid alcohol and be cautious about driving.
Side Effects
Common side effects of Anxitas:
- Drowsiness and sedation, especially at the start and after dose increases
- Dizziness, unsteady walking and poor coordination
- Slowed reactions, difficulty concentrating
- Drooling or dry mouth, constipation
- Irritability or behaviour changes, particularly in children
- Tolerance — the effect may lessen over months in some patients
Seek urgent medical help for: severe skin rash with blisters or peeling (rare but serious reactions are reported with clobazam), breathing difficulty or very shallow breathing (especially if combined with opioids or alcohol), worsening seizures, severe confusion, or signs of dependence such as craving and self-increased doses.
Precautions & Warnings
Key precautions with Anxitas:
- Dependence warning: benzodiazepines are the most misused medicine class in Bangladesh. Even in epilepsy, where longer use is medically justified, take Anxitas only at the prescribed dose, never increase it yourself, and never share it.
- Never stop abruptly — risk of rebound seizures and withdrawal; all changes must be tapered under medical supervision.
- No alcohol — it deepens sedation and can dangerously suppress breathing.
- Driving caution: do not drive or operate machinery until you are sure of your alertness — and remember epilepsy itself carries driving restrictions.
- Tell your doctor about breathing problems, liver or kidney disease, depression, muscle weakness or any history of substance misuse.
- Report severe rash immediately, and attend regular reviews so the specialist can reassess benefit, dose and duration.
Drug Interactions
Tell your doctor about every medicine you take. Important interactions with Anxitas:
- Alcohol — markedly increases sedation and clobazam levels; strictly avoid.
- Opioid painkillers (tramadol, morphine, codeine) — combined use can severely suppress breathing.
- Other anti-epileptics — interactions with valproate, phenytoin, carbamazepine, stiripentol and cannabidiol may change drug levels; specialists adjust doses accordingly.
- Strong CYP2C19 inhibitors (such as fluconazole, fluvoxamine, omeprazole) — can raise the active metabolite of clobazam and deepen sedation.
- Other sedatives — sleeping pills, sedating antihistamines, antipsychotics and some antidepressants add to drowsiness.
Contraindications
Anxitas must not be used in:
- Allergy to Clobazam or other benzodiazepines
- Severe respiratory failure or sleep apnoea syndrome
- Myasthenia gravis
- Severe liver disease
- History of dependence on alcohol or drugs, unless within a supervised treatment programme
- For the anxiety indication, it is not used in the first trimester of pregnancy and in very young children
Specialist judgement is required in the elderly and in anyone with chronic breathing problems or depression.
Pregnancy & Lactation
Pregnancy: Anxitas should be used in pregnancy only when the specialist judges it essential — for example, when stopping it would risk uncontrolled seizures, which are themselves dangerous for mother and baby. Benzodiazepines near delivery can make the newborn floppy, sleepy and slow to feed, and regular use can cause withdrawal symptoms in the baby. Never stop abruptly on discovering a pregnancy; contact your specialist the same day to review the plan.
Breastfeeding: Clobazam passes into breast milk and may sedate the infant. Breastfeeding is generally not recommended during treatment; if it is attempted under medical advice, the baby must be watched closely for sleepiness and poor feeding.
Storage Conditions
Store Anxitas below 30°C in a dry place, away from light and moisture, in its original packaging. As a benzodiazepine with misuse potential, keep it securely stored, out of the reach of children and of anyone it was not prescribed for. Do not use after the expiry date, and return unused tablets to a pharmacy — do not keep leftovers at home or give them to others.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Anxitas addictive even when taken for epilepsy?
<p>Anxitas is a benzodiazepine, so dependence is possible with any prolonged use — including in epilepsy. The difference is that in epilepsy the benefit of seizure control usually outweighs this risk, and the specialist monitors for tolerance and dependence at reviews. Protect yourself by taking exactly the prescribed dose, never increasing it on your own, never using it for sleep or stress relief, and never sharing it. If you feel the effect fading or notice craving, tell your neurologist rather than adjusting the dose yourself.</p>
What if I miss a dose of Anxitas?
<p>Take the missed dose as soon as you remember, unless it is nearly time for the next one — in that case skip it and continue your normal schedule. Never take a double dose to make up. Missing doses repeatedly is risky in epilepsy because falling medicine levels can let seizures break through, so consider alarms or a pill box. If you have missed several doses, or vomiting or illness prevents you from taking the medicine, contact your doctor promptly rather than restarting at full dose on your own.</p>
Why must Anxitas never be stopped suddenly?
<p>Two reasons. First, in epilepsy, abrupt withdrawal removes the seizure protection quickly and can trigger rebound seizures — sometimes prolonged, life-threatening status epilepticus. Second, after regular benzodiazepine use the brain has adapted, so sudden stopping causes withdrawal: severe anxiety, tremor, sweating, sleeplessness and occasionally confusion or seizures even in non-epileptic users. The safe approach is always a slow, planned taper over weeks, designed by your doctor. This applies even if you feel the medicine is no longer helping.</p>
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