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Tablet

Tiginor 20 mg Tablet

Generic: Atorvastatin

Manufacturer: Incepta Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

Therapeutic class: Statin (HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor) — lipid-lowering agent

What is Tiginor?

Tiginor 20 mg tablet is a medicine from Incepta Pharmaceuticals Ltd. containing the generic Atorvastatin. It belongs to the statin family, the most widely used cholesterol-lowering medicines in the world. Doctors in Bangladesh commonly prescribe it to reduce high cholesterol and triglycerides and, just as importantly, to lower the long-term risk of heart attack and stroke in people with diabetes, high blood pressure or existing heart disease.

Atorvastatin works by blocking an enzyme in the liver called HMG-CoA reductase, which the liver uses to manufacture cholesterol. With less cholesterol being made, the liver pulls more LDL ("bad") cholesterol out of the blood. It lowers LDL and triglycerides, modestly raises HDL ("good") cholesterol, and helps stabilise fatty deposits (plaques) inside artery walls so they are less likely to rupture and cause a heart attack.

Indications

Tiginor is prescribed for:

  • High cholesterol (hypercholesterolaemia) — raised total or LDL cholesterol, including inherited (familial) forms.
  • Mixed dyslipidaemia — high cholesterol together with high triglycerides.
  • Prevention of heart attack and stroke — in people with existing coronary heart disease, previous stroke, diabetes or multiple risk factors, even when cholesterol is only mildly raised.
  • After a heart attack or stent (angioplasty) — usually lifelong, to protect the arteries.

The target dose depends on your overall cardiovascular risk, which your doctor calculates.

Dosage & Administration

Your doctor sets the dose of Tiginor according to your cholesterol level and heart risk. Common doses range from 10 mg to 40 mg once daily, with up to 80 mg used after heart attack or in high-risk patients. Lipids are typically rechecked after 4–12 weeks and the dose adjusted.

  • Take it once daily at the same time — many people build the habit of taking it at night, since cholesterol production is highest while you sleep, and atorvastatin may be taken at any convenient fixed time, with or without food.
  • If you miss a dose, take it when you remember the same day; if it is almost time for the next one, skip it — never double.
  • Never stop Tiginor on your own just because a report looks normal — the protection works only while you take it.

Side Effects

Most people tolerate Tiginor well. Possible side effects include:

  • Muscle aches, tenderness or weakness — the most talked-about effect; usually mild, but report any unexplained, persistent muscle pain to your doctor, especially with fever or dark (tea-coloured) urine, as very rare cases of serious muscle breakdown (rhabdomyolysis) can occur.
  • Digestive upset — nausea, gas, constipation or diarrhoea.
  • Headache, nasopharyngitis or joint pain.
  • Liver enzyme rise — usually symptomless; your doctor may check liver tests.
  • Small rise in blood sugar — a slightly higher chance of diabetes in predisposed people; heart protection still outweighs this.

Precautions & Warnings

Keep these points in mind with Tiginor:

  • Report muscle pain early — unexplained aches, weakness or cramps, especially with fever or dark urine, need prompt review.
  • Tell your doctor about liver disease, kidney disease, thyroid problems or heavy alcohol use before starting; liver tests may be done at baseline and when indicated.
  • Avoid grapefruit juice in large amounts — it raises atorvastatin levels and the risk of muscle side effects.
  • Statins work alongside, not instead of, diet, exercise and weight control — continue them.
  • Tell any new doctor or pharmacist you take a statin before they prescribe antibiotics or antifungals.
  • Use effective contraception if you could become pregnant.

Drug Interactions

Some combinations raise the risk of muscle damage or alter drug levels with Tiginor:

  • Macrolide antibiotics (clarithromycin, erythromycin) and azole antifungals (itraconazole, ketoconazole) — statin levels rise; the statin may need pausing.
  • Fibrates (gemfibrozil in particular) and high-dose niacin — added muscle toxicity risk.
  • Ciclosporin, some HIV/HCV protease inhibitors — significant level increases; combinations may be restricted.
  • Amiodarone, diltiazem, verapamil — may raise statin exposure; dose caps apply.
  • Warfarin — INR may shift slightly when starting or stopping.
  • Grapefruit juice in large quantities — avoid.

Contraindications

Tiginor should not be taken if you have:

  • Active liver disease or persistent, unexplained rises in liver enzymes.
  • Pregnancy or breastfeeding — statins are contraindicated; cholesterol is essential for the developing baby.
  • Known allergy to atorvastatin or any component of the tablet.
  • A previous episode of statin-induced severe myopathy or rhabdomyolysis — only a specialist should decide about re-trying any statin.

Pregnancy & Lactation

Pregnancy: Tiginor must not be used during pregnancy. Cholesterol is needed for the baby's normal development, and statins are stopped before a planned pregnancy or as soon as pregnancy is discovered. If you can become pregnant, use reliable contraception while taking it, and tell your doctor immediately if you conceive — pausing a statin for the months of pregnancy is safe for the mother in most situations.

Breastfeeding: It is not known how much atorvastatin enters breast milk, and because of the potential risk to the infant, the medicine is not used while breastfeeding. Your doctor will advise when to restart after feeding is complete.

Storage Conditions

Store Tiginor below 30°C in a dry place away from direct sunlight, heat and moisture. Keep the tablets in their original blister pack until use and out of the reach and sight of children. Do not take the medicine after the expiry date printed on the strip or carton; return expired or unused tablets to a pharmacy for safe disposal.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I stop Tiginor when I feel better and my cholesterol report is normal?

<p>No — do not stop Tiginor on your own. A normal report means the medicine is doing exactly what it should; cholesterol will drift back up within weeks of stopping, and the protection against heart attack and stroke disappears with it. High cholesterol causes no symptoms, so "feeling fine" tells you nothing about your arteries. For most people with heart disease, diabetes or high risk, statin treatment is long-term. If you are worried about side effects or cost, discuss alternatives or dose changes with your doctor instead of stopping.</p>

Should I take Tiginor at night, and what if I get muscle pain?

<p>Atorvastatin is long-acting, so it works whether you take it morning or night — what matters is the same time every day. Many doctors still suggest a night-time habit, since the body makes most cholesterol during sleep, and an evening routine is easy to remember. If you develop muscle pain, tenderness, cramps or weakness that you cannot explain by exercise or injury, do not ignore it: keep taking note of when it occurs and inform your doctor promptly. Seek urgent care if the pain is severe or your urine turns dark, which can signal rare muscle breakdown.</p>

Do I still need to control my diet while taking Tiginor?

<p>Yes. Tiginor lowers the cholesterol your liver manufactures, but it cannot cancel out a diet heavy in fried food, ghee, fatty meat and trans fats, nor the effects of smoking and inactivity. Medicine and lifestyle work as a team: a balanced diet rich in vegetables, fruits and fish, at least 30 minutes of brisk walking most days, weight control and quitting smoking all multiply the benefit and may allow a lower dose. Think of the tablet as one pillar of heart protection, not the whole building.</p>

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