ChamberBD Logo ChamberBD

Tablet

Metoren-50 50 mg Tablet

Generic: Metoprolol Tartrate

Manufacturer: Renata PLC, Gazipur

Therapeutic class: Beta-blocker (Cardioselective, Beta-1)

What is Metoren-50?

Metoren-50 50 mg tablet is a medicine from Renata PLC, Gazipur that contains Metoprolol Tartrate, a cardioselective beta-blocker used to treat high blood pressure, angina (chest pain), irregular or fast heartbeats, and to protect the heart after a heart attack.

Metoprolol works by blocking beta-1 receptors, the "accelerator switches" on the heart that respond to stress hormones like adrenaline. With these switches blocked, the heart beats more slowly and with less force, needs less oxygen, and the blood pressure falls. This relieves the strain on the heart muscle — easing angina, calming abnormal rhythms and improving survival after a heart attack and in heart failure.

Indications

  • High blood pressure (hypertension) — alone or with other medicines
  • Angina pectoris — to reduce the frequency of chest pain attacks
  • Heart rhythm disorders — controlling fast heart rates such as atrial fibrillation or SVT
  • After a heart attack — to protect the heart and reduce the risk of another attack
  • Stable chronic heart failure — under specialist guidance
  • Other uses — migraine prevention, symptoms of overactive thyroid, tremor (as advised)

Dosage & Administration

Your doctor will set the dose of Metoren-50 according to your condition, blood pressure and pulse rate, usually starting low and adjusting gradually. Metoprolol tartrate is commonly taken twice daily.

  • Take it at the same times each day, with or just after food for steadier absorption.
  • Check your pulse as advised — if it falls below the rate your doctor has set (often 55–60 beats/minute), contact the clinic before the next dose.
  • If you miss a dose, take it when you remember unless the next dose is near — never double up.

Never stop Metoren-50 suddenly. Abrupt stopping can rebound into severe chest pain, a racing heart, dangerously high pressure or even a heart attack — the dose must be reduced step by step under your doctor's guidance.

Side Effects

Most side effects are mild and settle as the body adjusts:

  • Tiredness, fatigue, dizziness — common in the first weeks
  • Slow pulse (bradycardia)
  • Cold hands and feet
  • Vivid dreams or sleep disturbance
  • Stomach upset, nausea
  • Reduced exercise capacity; occasionally low mood or erectile difficulty

Contact your doctor promptly if you develop:

  • Pulse persistently below the set limit, fainting or severe dizziness
  • New or worsening breathlessness, wheeze, or swelling of ankles (possible heart failure worsening or airway narrowing)
  • Very low blood sugar warning signs being masked (in diabetics, sweating may remain the main clue)

Precautions & Warnings

  • Learn to check your pulse and record it as your doctor advises.
  • Tell your doctor if you have asthma or COPD — beta-blockers can narrow airways; cardioselective ones like metoprolol are used cautiously if essential.
  • Diabetics: metoprolol can mask the racing-heart warning of low blood sugar — monitor glucose more closely.
  • Tell your doctor about heart failure, slow heart rhythms, thyroid disease, liver disease or poor leg circulation.
  • Inform any surgeon or anaesthetist that you take a beta-blocker before an operation — it is usually continued, not stopped.
  • Rise slowly to avoid dizziness; limit alcohol.
  • Do not exercise to exhaustion just because your heart "feels calm" — the medicine limits your maximum heart rate.

Drug Interactions

  • Verapamil and diltiazem: dangerous slowing of the heart — this combination needs specialist supervision
  • Digoxin, amiodarone, ivabradine: additive slowing of heart rate
  • Other blood pressure medicines: additive pressure drop
  • Insulin and diabetes tablets: low-sugar warning signs may be masked
  • NSAID painkillers: can blunt the blood-pressure effect
  • CYP2D6 inhibitors (fluoxetine, paroxetine, propafenone): raise metoprolol levels
  • Clonidine: special care when stopping either drug
  • Salbutamol inhalers: effects may oppose each other; tell your doctor if you use both

Tell your doctor about all medicines, supplements and herbal products you use.

Contraindications

  • Allergy to metoprolol or other beta-blockers
  • Very slow heart rate (severe bradycardia), second- or third-degree heart block without a pacemaker, sick sinus syndrome
  • Cardiogenic shock or severe decompensated heart failure
  • Severe low blood pressure
  • Severe asthma with previous beta-blocker reaction
  • Untreated phaeochromocytoma (adrenal tumour)
  • Severe peripheral arterial disease with rest pain

Pregnancy & Lactation

Pregnancy: Metoprolol is used in pregnancy only when the doctor judges the benefit outweighs the risk — for example, for significant hypertension or rhythm problems. Babies exposed near delivery are monitored for slow heart rate, low blood sugar and small size. Never start or stop it in pregnancy without medical advice.

Lactation: Only small amounts pass into breast milk, and metoprolol is generally considered compatible with breastfeeding. Watch the baby for unusual sleepiness, poor feeding or slow pulse and inform the paediatrician if these occur.

Storage Conditions

Store below 30°C in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight and moisture. Keep in the original pack until use, and keep out of the reach of children. Do not use after the expiry date.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I stop Metoren-50 when I feel better?

<p>No — and with this medicine the warning is even stronger. Metoren-50 is a beta-blocker, and stopping it suddenly causes a <strong>rebound effect</strong>: the heart becomes extra-sensitive to stress hormones, which can trigger severe chest pain, a racing heart, a blood pressure surge or even a heart attack within days. You feel well because the medicine is working. If it ever needs to stop, your doctor will taper the dose down gradually over 1–2 weeks.</p>

How should I check my pulse while taking Metoren-50?

<p>Place two fingers (not the thumb) on the inside of your wrist below the thumb, count the beats for 30 seconds and double the number. Check at rest, ideally each morning before the dose. Metoren-50 is expected to slow your pulse somewhat — that is how it protects the heart — but if it stays below the limit your doctor set (commonly 55–60 beats per minute), or you feel faint, dizzy or unusually tired, hold off the next dose and contact your doctor for advice.</p>

Why do I feel tired and get cold hands after starting Metoren-50?

<p>Both are known effects of beta-blockers. Metoren-50 deliberately slows the heart and reduces its forcefulness, so in the first weeks many people feel more tired, especially during exercise. It also slightly narrows blood flow to the skin, making hands and feet feel cold. These effects usually ease within a few weeks as your body adjusts. Keep warm, build activity up gradually, and tell your doctor if tiredness is severe or worsening — the dose may need adjusting, but never change it yourself.</p>

Was this information helpful?

Last updated: