Tablet
Migratin 500 mcg Tablet
Generic: Pizotifen
Manufacturer: Incepta Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
Therapeutic class: Serotonin Antagonist / Migraine Prophylactic
What is Migratin?
Migratin 500 mcg tablet is manufactured by Incepta Pharmaceuticals Ltd. and contains Pizotifen, a medicine used to prevent migraine and recurrent vascular headaches. It is a prophylactic: taken regularly every day, it gradually makes attacks less frequent and less severe. It is not a painkiller and cannot stop a migraine that has already begun. It is one of the older, well-tried migraine preventives and is also used in children on specialist advice.
Pizotifen works mainly by blocking serotonin and histamine receptors on blood vessels and nerves involved in migraine. This reduces the chain of events — blood-vessel changes and nerve over-reactivity — that sets off migraine attacks, so over several weeks the headaches become fewer.
Indications
Doctors prescribe Migratin for:
- Migraine prophylaxis — preventing frequent or disabling migraine attacks in adults, and in children when a specialist advises
- Recurrent vascular headaches, including cluster-type headaches in selected patients
Preventive treatment with Migratin is usually considered when attacks come several times a month, last long, or do not respond well to acute painkillers. It is a prescription-only medicine; the decision to start, the dose, and how long to continue all belong to your doctor, who will weigh benefit against side effects such as weight gain and drowsiness.
Dosage & Administration
Migratin is prescription-only; your doctor sets the dose. General information:
- Adults: commonly 1.5 mg daily — either 0.5 mg three times a day or, very often, the whole dose at night, because the medicine causes drowsiness. The doctor may adjust between 0.5 and 3 mg daily; higher doses are divided.
- Children (specialist use): usually up to 1.5 mg daily, commonly given at night.
- Benefit develops gradually — allow 4–8 weeks of regular use before judging the response, and keep a headache diary.
Take it every day, not just when you have pain. Do not stop it abruptly on your own — sudden withdrawal after long use can cause rebound symptoms such as poor sleep, nausea and irritability; your doctor will reduce it gradually when the time comes.
Side Effects
Common side effects of Migratin:
- Increased appetite and weight gain — the best-known effect; weight should be checked regularly
- Drowsiness and tiredness, especially at the start — usually improves with time and is managed by night dosing
- Dry mouth
- Dizziness, nausea
- Constipation in some people
Less commonly there may be muscle aches, mood changes or, rarely, paradoxical restlessness in children. Seek medical advice if you notice marked continuing weight gain, persistent low mood, severe drowsiness that does not settle, difficulty passing urine, or any allergic reaction such as rash and swelling.
Precautions & Warnings
Take these precautions with Migratin:
- Watch your weight: weigh yourself monthly, eat sensibly and stay active — appetite increase is common and gradual.
- Driving caution: avoid driving or operating machinery until you know how drowsy the medicine makes you, particularly in the first weeks.
- Avoid alcohol — it adds to the sedation.
- Tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, difficulty passing urine or an enlarged prostate, kidney problems or epilepsy — pizotifen's antihistamine-like effects need caution in these conditions.
- Do not stop long-term treatment abruptly; reduce gradually under medical guidance.
- Keep follow-up visits so the doctor can confirm the preventive benefit justifies continuing.
Drug Interactions
Tell your doctor about all your medicines. Important interactions with Migratin:
- Alcohol — increased drowsiness; avoid.
- Sleeping pills, benzodiazepines and other sedatives — additive sedation.
- Sedating antihistamines (e.g., chlorpheniramine) — drowsiness and dry-mouth effects add up.
- Antidepressants — tricyclics add sedation and anticholinergic effects; in theory pizotifen may blunt some serotonergic medicines, so mention any antidepressant use.
- Anticholinergic medicines — increased dry mouth, constipation and urinary difficulty.
Contraindications
Migratin must not be used in:
- Allergy to Pizotifen or any ingredient of the preparation
- Angle-closure glaucoma
- Urinary retention or significant prostate enlargement with obstruction
Use with caution, on medical advice, in people with epilepsy, kidney or liver impairment, and in the elderly, who are more sensitive to drowsiness and anticholinergic effects. Some formulations contain lactose or sucrose — mention any sugar intolerance to your doctor or pharmacist.
Pregnancy & Lactation
Pregnancy: there is limited information about Pizotifen use in human pregnancy. Migratin should be used during pregnancy only if the doctor judges it clearly necessary — migraine prevention can very often be paused or replaced with safer measures during this period. Tell your doctor immediately if you become pregnant while taking it.
Breastfeeding: Pizotifen may pass into breast milk and could make the baby drowsy or irritable. Breastfeeding is generally not recommended during treatment with Migratin; if you are nursing, ask your doctor about safer alternatives.
Storage Conditions
Store Migratin below 30°C in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight and moisture, in its original packaging. Keep it strictly out of the reach of children — the tablets are small and sugar-coated in some brands, which can attract children. Do not use after the expiry date, and return unused medicine to a pharmacy rather than throwing it into household waste.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will Migratin relieve my migraine once the pain has started?
<p>No. Migratin is a <strong>preventive</strong> medicine: its job is to reduce how often attacks come and how severe they are, and it only works when taken regularly every day for weeks. It cannot abort an attack that has already begun. For the acute attack your doctor will recommend a separate rescue treatment — paracetamol, an NSAID or a triptan — taken as early as possible. Continue Migratin daily even when you feel completely well.</p>
Does Migratin really increase appetite and weight?
<p>Yes — increased appetite with gradual weight gain is the best-known side effect of Migratin, affecting a substantial share of users on longer treatment. It happens because the medicine blocks histamine and serotonin receptors that influence appetite. To manage it: weigh yourself monthly, keep regular meals without extra snacking, choose filling low-calorie foods, and stay physically active. If weight rises significantly despite these steps, talk to your doctor — the dose can be reviewed or a different preventive chosen. Do not stop suddenly on your own.</p>
How long do I need to take Migratin for migraine prevention?
<p>Give it at least 4–8 weeks of daily use before judging whether it works — preventive medicines act slowly. If your headache diary shows clearly fewer or milder attacks, doctors usually continue treatment for about 6 months and then trial a gradual dose reduction to see whether prevention is still needed; many patients keep the benefit after stopping. The dose should always be reduced step by step rather than stopped abruptly after long use. Let your doctor make these decisions with you at follow-up visits.</p>
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