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Cozycap

Budemet 400 Convicap 400 mcg + 12 mcg Cozycap

Generic: Budesonide + Formoterol Fumarate

Manufacturer: Incepta Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

Therapeutic class: Inhaled corticosteroid + long-acting beta-2 agonist (ICS/LABA) combination

What is Budemet 400 Convicap?

Budemet 400 Convicap 400 mcg + 12 mcg cozycap is manufactured by Incepta Pharmaceuticals Ltd.. It is a combination inhaler containing Budesonide + Formoterol Fumarate — budesonide, an inhaled corticosteroid, and formoterol, a long-acting bronchodilator. It is used as a controller (preventer) inhaler, taken regularly every day to keep asthma and COPD under control rather than to treat an attack that has already started.

Budesonide works inside the airway walls to reduce the inflammation and swelling that make breathing difficult. Formoterol relaxes the muscles around the airways, starts working within minutes and keeps the airways open for about 12 hours. Used regularly, Budemet 400 Convicap reduces wheezing, breathlessness, chest tightness and night waking, and lowers the risk of asthma attacks and COPD flare-ups.

Indications

Budemet 400 Convicap is prescribed for the regular, long-term treatment of:

  • Asthma — when an inhaled corticosteroid alone does not give adequate control, or when both an inhaled steroid and a long-acting bronchodilator are appropriate
  • COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) — to ease breathing and reduce repeated flare-ups in suitable patients

In certain asthma plans, doctors prescribe a budesonide–formoterol inhaler as both daily maintenance and as-needed relief (a MART/SMART regimen), because formoterol acts quickly — but follow this pattern only if your own doctor has specifically prescribed it. Otherwise treat Budemet 400 Convicap purely as a daily controller and keep a separate reliever.

Dosage & Administration

Use Budemet 400 Convicap exactly as your doctor prescribes — commonly one or two inhalations twice daily (morning and evening), every day, even when you feel well. Children should use it only at the dose and age the doctor approves.

  • Follow your written asthma action plan; do not take extra doses beyond what the doctor has allowed
  • Use the correct technique for your device (dry-powder inhalers need a quick, deep, forceful breath in) — have your technique checked at follow-up visits
  • Rinse your mouth with water and spit it out after every use to prevent oral thrush and hoarseness
  • Keep a fast-acting reliever available as your doctor directs, and never stop Budemet 400 Convicap suddenly without medical advice

Side Effects

Possible side effects of Budemet 400 Convicap include:

  • Oral thrush (white patches in the mouth) and hoarseness — far less likely if you rinse your mouth after each dose
  • Throat irritation, cough
  • Headache
  • Trembling of the hands, palpitations or a fast heartbeat — usually mild and settling with continued use
  • Muscle cramps, restlessness or sleep disturbance
  • In COPD — a slightly increased chance of pneumonia; report fever, increased phlegm or worsening breathlessness

Rarely, breathing may worsen immediately after a dose (paradoxical bronchospasm) — use your reliever and seek urgent care. Long-term high doses can affect bones, eyes, blood sugar, adrenal function and growth in children, so regular review is important.

Precautions & Warnings

  • Use it every day, even when you feel well — the steroid only works with regular use, and stopping suddenly can bring symptoms back
  • Needing your reliever more often than usual is a warning sign that your asthma or COPD is worsening — see your doctor promptly instead of simply taking more puffs
  • Rinse your mouth after every dose to prevent thrush and hoarseness
  • Tell your doctor if you have heart disease, an irregular or fast heartbeat, high blood pressure, diabetes, thyroid disease, low blood potassium, or current or past tuberculosis
  • Do not use another LABA-containing inhaler at the same time unless your doctor specifically directs it
  • Attend regular reviews so the dose can be kept at the lowest that controls your symptoms, and have your inhaler technique rechecked

Drug Interactions

Tell your doctor about every medicine you take before starting Budemet 400 Convicap. Notable interactions include:

  • Strong CYP3A4 inhibitors — ketoconazole, itraconazole, ritonavir and some other HIV medicines, clarithromycin: these raise budesonide and formoterol levels and increase the risk of steroid and heart-related effects
  • Beta-blockers — including propranolol and timolol eye drops — can cancel the effect of formoterol and narrow the airways; usually avoided in asthma
  • Diuretics, theophylline, oral steroids — may add to potassium lowering, causing weakness, cramps or palpitations
  • QT-prolonging medicines — certain antidepressants, antipsychotics and antiarrhythmics need extra caution
  • Other LABA inhalers — must not be duplicated

Contraindications

Do not use Budemet 400 Convicap if you:

  • Are allergic to budesonide, formoterol or any other ingredient of the device
  • Have a severe allergy to milk proteins, in the case of dry-powder devices that contain lactose

Budemet 400 Convicap is not a primary treatment for a sudden, severe asthma attack (status asthmaticus) — emergency reliever treatment is required. It should be used with close medical supervision in severe heart rhythm disorders, uncontrolled heart disease, severe hypertension, untreated low potassium, thyrotoxicosis and active tuberculosis. Your doctor will decide whether it is suitable for you.

Pregnancy & Lactation

Pregnancy: Uncontrolled asthma is more dangerous to mother and baby than inhaled asthma medicines, so doctors usually continue effective inhaled treatment during pregnancy. Budesonide is among the best-studied inhaled steroids in pregnancy. Use Budemet 400 Convicap only under your doctor's supervision and never stop it suddenly on your own while pregnant.

Breastfeeding: Only very small amounts of inhaled budesonide and formoterol reach breast milk, and breastfeeding is usually considered possible during treatment. Confirm with your doctor, who will keep you on the lowest effective dose and monitor the baby as needed.

Storage Conditions

Store Budemet 400 Convicap below 30°C in a dry place, away from heat and direct sunlight. Keep the cover or cap closed when not in use.

  • Protect dry-powder devices from moisture — never wash the mouthpiece with water; wipe it with a dry cloth
  • Do not breathe out into the device
  • Pressurised canisters must not be pierced or burned, even when empty
  • Watch the dose counter and replace the inhaler when doses run out or by the discard date on the label
  • Keep out of the reach and sight of children

Frequently Asked Questions

Can Budemet 400 Convicap be used for sudden breathlessness, or do I need a separate reliever?

Follow your own doctor's plan. The formoterol in Budemet 400 Convicap does start working within minutes, and in certain prescribed regimens (called MART or SMART) doctors allow the same inhaler to be used both daily and for relief of symptoms. However, this applies only if your doctor has specifically prescribed it that way and set a maximum number of daily puffs. If you have not been given such a plan, treat Budemet 400 Convicap as a daily controller only and use a separate fast-acting reliever such as salbutamol for sudden symptoms.

Why do I need to rinse my mouth after using Budemet 400 Convicap?

Each dose of Budemet 400 Convicap leaves a small amount of the steroid budesonide in your mouth and throat. If it stays there, it can encourage oral thrush — a fungal infection causing white patches, soreness and altered taste — and can make your voice hoarse. Rinsing your mouth well with water and spitting it out immediately after every dose removes the residue and prevents most of these problems. Gargling gently and cleaning dentures, if you wear them, also helps.

My symptoms are gone — can I stop using Budemet 400 Convicap every day?

No, do not stop on your own. Your symptoms are controlled because the budesonide in Budemet 400 Convicap is continuously suppressing the inflammation in your airways. Stopping suddenly lets the inflammation return, and symptoms or a serious attack can come back within days or weeks. If your condition stays stable for months, your doctor may gradually step down to a lower dose and monitor you. Any reduction or stop should always be planned with your doctor.

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