Syrup
Frusin 40 mg/5 ml Syrup
Generic: Frusemide (Furosemide)
Manufacturer: Opsonin Pharma Limited
Therapeutic class: Loop Diuretic
What is Frusin?
Frusin 40 mg/5 ml syrup is a medicine from Opsonin Pharma Limited that contains Frusemide (Furosemide), a powerful loop diuretic ("water tablet") used to remove excess fluid from the body in heart failure, liver disease, kidney disease and other conditions causing swelling (oedema), and sometimes to treat high blood pressure.
Frusemide works on a part of the kidney called the loop of Henle. It blocks the pump that reabsorbs salt (sodium and chloride) back into the blood, so more salt — and with it more water — leaves the body in the urine. This drains the extra fluid that collects in the legs, abdomen and lungs, relieving swelling and breathlessness and reducing the workload on the heart. The effect starts within about an hour of a tablet and lasts around six hours.
Indications
- Heart failure — relieving breathlessness and swelling of the legs and lungs
- Oedema — fluid retention from liver cirrhosis (ascites), kidney disease or nephrotic syndrome
- High blood pressure — usually when kidney function is reduced or other medicines are insufficient
- Acute pulmonary oedema — emergency hospital treatment of fluid in the lungs (injection form)
Dosage & Administration
Your doctor will adjust the dose of Frusin to your condition, weight changes and kidney tests — fluid removal must be gradual and monitored.
- Take it in the morning (and a second dose by early afternoon if prescribed) so that the increased urination does not disturb your sleep.
- Weigh yourself at the same time each morning if advised — your doctor may set a target weight and teach you when to report a sudden gain or loss.
- If you miss a dose, take it when you remember the same day, but avoid taking it in the evening; never double up.
Do not stop or change the dose of Frusin on your own — in heart failure, stopping can let fluid rebuild in the lungs within days. Your doctor will also check blood tests (potassium, sodium, kidney function) regularly.
Side Effects
Most side effects relate to fluid and salt loss:
- Increased urination for several hours after the dose (expected)
- Thirst, dry mouth, dizziness or light-headedness, especially on standing
- Low potassium — muscle cramps, weakness, palpitations
- Low sodium or magnesium, dehydration
- Increased uric acid — can trigger gout
- Raised blood sugar in some patients
- Less common but serious: ringing in the ears or hearing problems (high doses), severe skin reactions, marked reduction in urine output — seek medical help
Precautions & Warnings
- Attend all follow-ups — regular blood tests for potassium, sodium and kidney function are essential on this medicine.
- Weigh yourself as advised and report a gain of more than about 1.5–2 kg over 2–3 days, or rapid loss.
- Eat potassium-containing foods (banana, coconut water, leafy greens) if your doctor advises; some patients need a potassium supplement or a potassium-sparing combination.
- In hot weather, diarrhoea or vomiting, dehydration develops quickly — contact your doctor; the dose may need a temporary change.
- Rise slowly from sitting or lying to avoid falls, especially in the elderly.
- Tell your doctor if you have diabetes, gout, prostate enlargement or difficulty passing urine.
- Plan the dose timing around travel so toilet access is not a problem.
Drug Interactions
- NSAID painkillers (ibuprofen, diclofenac): blunt the diuretic effect and strain the kidneys
- Digoxin: low potassium caused by frusemide increases digoxin toxicity — potassium must be monitored
- Aminoglycoside antibiotics (gentamicin, amikacin): combined risk of hearing damage and kidney injury
- Lithium: levels can rise to toxic range
- Other blood pressure medicines, ACE inhibitors/ARBs: additive pressure drop; kidney function watched when starting
- Corticosteroids: add to potassium loss
- Diabetes medicines: frusemide may raise blood sugar slightly
Tell your doctor about all medicines, supplements and herbal products you use.
Contraindications
- Allergy to frusemide or sulphonamide-derived medicines
- Severe dehydration or very low blood volume
- Complete inability to pass urine (anuria) or kidney failure not producing urine
- Severe low potassium or low sodium until corrected
- Hepatic coma or pre-coma in liver disease (used only under specialist care)
Pregnancy & Lactation
Pregnancy: Frusemide crosses the placenta and is used in pregnancy only for clear medical reasons (such as heart failure or pulmonary oedema), under specialist supervision. It is not used to treat ordinary pregnancy swelling or pregnancy-induced hypertension, where it can reduce placental blood flow. Always inform your doctor if you are or may be pregnant.
Lactation: Frusemide passes into breast milk and may reduce milk production. If it is essential for the mother, the doctor will weigh the options — sometimes feeds are timed around doses or an alternative is chosen.
Storage Conditions
Store below 30°C in a cool, dry place, protected from light — frusemide is light-sensitive, so keep tablets in the original pack until use. Keep out of the reach of children. Do not use after the expiry date.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I stop Frusin when the swelling goes away and I feel better?
<p>No. The swelling and breathlessness have gone <strong>because</strong> Frusin keeps draining the excess fluid every day. In heart failure or liver disease, stopping on your own lets fluid rebuild — often within days — and it can collect in the lungs, causing an emergency. Your doctor may well reduce the dose over time as you improve, but that decision needs an examination, your weight record and blood tests. Never stop or skip it yourself.</p>
Why should I take Frusin in the morning, and why must I weigh myself?
<p>Frusin makes you pass extra urine for about six hours after each dose. Taken in the morning, this happens during the day; taken at night, it would wake you repeatedly and increase the risk of falls in the dark. Daily morning weighing (after the toilet, before breakfast, same clothes) is the most sensitive way to track body fluid: weight rising more than about 1.5–2 kg over 2–3 days usually means fluid is returning and your doctor may need to adjust the dose — often before you feel any symptom.</p>
Does Frusin wash out potassium? What should I eat?
<p>Yes, this is its most important side effect to watch. Frusin increases the loss of potassium (and some sodium and magnesium) in the urine. Low potassium can cause muscle cramps, weakness and palpitations, and is risky if you also take digoxin. Your doctor will check blood tests regularly and may advise potassium-rich foods — banana, coconut water, orange, potato, leafy greens — or prescribe a potassium supplement or combine frusemide with a potassium-sparing medicine like spironolactone. Do not start potassium supplements on your own.</p>
Last updated: