Tablet
Methigic 2 2 mg Tablet
Generic: Methylprednisolone
Manufacturer: Square Pharmaceuticals PLC, Pabna
Therapeutic class: Oral corticosteroid (glucocorticoid)
What is Methigic 2?
Methigic 2 2 mg tablet is manufactured by Square Pharmaceuticals PLC, Pabna. It contains Methylprednisolone, an oral corticosteroid (steroid) used to control inflammation and calm an overactive immune system in conditions such as severe allergic reactions, asthma flare-ups, rheumatoid arthritis and many skin, kidney, bowel and autoimmune diseases. It is a powerful prescription medicine that must be taken exactly as directed and never stopped suddenly.
Methylprednisolone is a synthetic version of cortisol, a hormone made by the adrenal glands. It enters the body's cells and switches off the genes that produce inflammatory chemicals, thereby reducing swelling, redness, pain and the immune system's attack on the body's own tissues. Because it affects many organ systems, your doctor tailors the dose and duration of Methigic 2 carefully to your condition.
Indications
Doctors prescribe Methigic 2 for many inflammatory, allergic and immune-related conditions, including:
- Severe allergic reactions and severe urticaria or drug allergy
- Asthma and COPD flare-ups, and some other lung diseases
- Rheumatoid arthritis, lupus (SLE) and other joint and connective-tissue diseases
- Severe skin diseases — such as extensive eczema, lichen planus or pemphigus
- Nephrotic syndrome and certain kidney conditions
- Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease
- Certain blood disorders — such as ITP and autoimmune haemolytic anaemia
The condition, dose and length of treatment differ greatly between patients — use Methigic 2 only for the illness it was prescribed for.
Dosage & Administration
The dose of Methigic 2 varies widely — from a few milligrams daily to much higher doses — depending on the disease, its severity and your response. Take it exactly as your doctor prescribes.
- Take it with food or milk to protect your stomach
- If prescribed once daily, taking it in the morning matches the body's natural steroid rhythm and disturbs sleep less
- Never stop suddenly after more than a few days of use — the dose must be reduced step by step (tapered) on the doctor's schedule
- Children: doses are calculated by the doctor according to weight and the condition being treated
Do not change the dose, skip the taper or stop Methigic 2 on your own, even if you feel completely well.
Side Effects
Short courses of Methigic 2 are usually well tolerated. Possible side effects include:
- Increased appetite and weight gain
- Stomach upset, heartburn or indigestion
- Mood changes, irritability, difficulty sleeping
- Raised blood sugar and blood pressure
- Facial rounding, fluid retention and swelling
With longer use: thinning of the bones (osteoporosis), muscle weakness, thin skin and easy bruising, cataracts or glaucoma, higher risk of infections, slowed growth in children and suppression of the body's own steroid production. Report black stools, severe stomach pain, vision changes, signs of infection or severe mood changes to your doctor immediately while taking Methigic 2.
Precautions & Warnings
- Never stop Methigic 2 abruptly — after more than a few days the body cuts back its own steroid production, and sudden stopping can cause adrenal crisis; always follow the tapering plan
- Take it with food, and tell your doctor about any history of stomach ulcer
- Infection risk: avoid close contact with people who have chickenpox, measles or other infections, and report fever or feeling unwell promptly — steroids can hide the usual signs of infection
- Diabetes: monitor blood sugar more often, as steroids raise it; insulin or tablet doses may need adjusting
- Blood pressure, eyes and bones should be checked during long-term treatment; calcium and vitamin D may be advised
- Tell every doctor, dentist or surgeon that you take steroids, and avoid live vaccines unless your doctor approves
Drug Interactions
Many medicines interact with Methigic 2. Tell your doctor everything you take, especially:
- NSAID painkillers — aspirin, ibuprofen, diclofenac: combined with steroids they raise the risk of stomach ulcers and bleeding
- Diabetes medicines and insulin — steroids raise blood sugar, so doses may need adjusting
- Warfarin and other blood thinners — effects may change; closer monitoring is needed
- Diuretics — added potassium loss, causing weakness or palpitations
- Rifampicin, phenytoin, carbamazepine — speed up steroid breakdown and weaken its effect
- Ketoconazole and some HIV medicines — increase steroid levels and side effects
- Live vaccines — generally avoided during significant steroid doses
Contraindications
Do not take Methigic 2 if you:
- Are allergic to methylprednisolone or any other ingredient of the preparation
- Have a widespread (systemic) fungal infection
- Are due to receive a live or live-attenuated vaccine while on immunosuppressive steroid doses, unless your doctor approves
Methigic 2 needs special caution — and sometimes additional treatment first — in active or past tuberculosis, untreated infections, stomach ulcers, severe diabetes, severe high blood pressure, glaucoma, osteoporosis and serious mental illness. Your doctor will weigh these risks before prescribing it.
Pregnancy & Lactation
Pregnancy: Methylprednisolone is used in pregnancy only when the doctor judges that the benefit to the mother outweighs any risk to the baby — for example in severe asthma or autoimmune disease, where the untreated illness itself is dangerous. Prolonged or high-dose use needs close monitoring of both mother and baby. Never start, stop or change Methigic 2 in pregnancy without medical advice.
Breastfeeding: Small amounts pass into breast milk. Usual doses are generally considered compatible with breastfeeding; with higher doses the doctor may advise waiting a few hours after a dose before feeding. Discuss your dose and feeding schedule with your doctor.
Storage Conditions
Store Methigic 2 below 30°C in a cool, dry place, protected from light and moisture. Keep tablets in the original blister pack until use.
- Keep out of the reach and sight of children
- Do not use after the expiry date printed on the pack
- Do not keep leftover tablets to self-treat future illnesses — steroid use always needs a doctor's supervision
Frequently Asked Questions
Why can I not stop Methigic 2 suddenly?
When you take a steroid like Methigic 2 for more than a few days, your adrenal glands sense it and slow down their own natural steroid (cortisol) production. If the tablets then stop abruptly, the body is left with too little steroid — causing severe weakness, vomiting, low blood pressure, dizziness and, in the worst case, a life-threatening adrenal crisis. The dose must therefore be reduced gradually (tapered) on your doctor's schedule, giving the adrenal glands time to wake up again.
Should I take Methigic 2 with food, and at what time of day?
Yes — always take Methigic 2 with or immediately after food or milk, because steroids irritate the stomach lining and can contribute to ulcers, especially when combined with painkillers like ibuprofen or diclofenac. If your dose is once daily, taking it in the morning is usually best: it matches the body's natural cortisol rhythm, causes less insomnia and suppresses your own steroid production less. If your doctor has split the dose through the day, follow that schedule exactly.
Will Methigic 2 raise my blood sugar? I have diabetes.
It can. Steroids such as Methigic 2 make the liver release more glucose and make the body less responsive to insulin, so blood sugar often rises — noticeably in people with diabetes, and occasionally even in those without it (steroid-induced diabetes). Tell the prescribing doctor that you have diabetes, check your sugar more frequently during the course, and report high readings; your insulin or tablet doses may need temporary adjustment. Sugar levels usually settle back after the steroid is tapered and stopped under supervision.
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