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IV Infusion

Zolivox IV Infusion 600 mg/300 ml IV Infusion

Generic: Linezolid

Manufacturer: Square Pharmaceuticals PLC, Gazipur

Therapeutic class: Oxazolidinone antibiotic (reserve antibiotic)

What is Zolivox IV Infusion?

Zolivox IV Infusion 600 mg/300 ml iv infusion by Square Pharmaceuticals PLC, Gazipur contains linezolid, an oxazolidinone antibiotic. It is a powerful 'reserve' antibiotic kept for serious infections caused by certain resistant bacteria, such as MRSA and resistant streptococci or enterococci, when other antibiotics cannot be used.

Linezolid works by attaching to the bacterial ribosome and stopping bacteria at a very early step of making proteins. Without these proteins the bacteria cannot grow or multiply. Because it remains effective against several multi-drug-resistant germs, linezolid is reserved to protect its usefulness and is started only by specialists.

Indications

Linezolid is prescribed by specialists for serious infections caused by sensitive resistant bacteria, including:

  • Hospital- and community-acquired pneumonia caused by certain resistant bacteria
  • Complicated skin and soft-tissue infections, including some MRSA infections
  • Infections caused by resistant Gram-positive bacteria (such as VRE) when other options are unsuitable

It is reserved for situations where standard antibiotics will not work. Treatment is started and supervised by a doctor, usually a specialist.

Dosage & Administration

The dose of Zolivox IV Infusion is decided by your specialist. The information below is a general guide only.

  • Adults: the tablet is usually taken twice daily (every 12 hours); courses are commonly 10 to 14 days and should not normally exceed 28 days because of the risk of side effects.
  • Children: the dose is calculated by body weight and must be set by a specialist.

Zolivox IV Infusion can be taken with or without food. Take it at evenly spaced times, do not exceed the prescribed duration, and complete the course exactly as instructed.

Side Effects

Linezolid can cause side effects, and longer courses carry more risk:

  • Common: diarrhoea, nausea, headache and a metallic taste
  • Less common: thrush (oral or vaginal), dizziness and rash
  • Serious (seek urgent help): easy bruising or bleeding, unusual tiredness or paleness (low blood counts); blurred vision or colour-vision changes; numbness or tingling in hands or feet; or agitation, fever and shivering (a sign of serotonin toxicity)

Blood counts may be checked during longer treatment. Report any visual changes, numbness or bleeding promptly.

Precautions & Warnings

Linezolid is a reserve antibiotic — it should only be used when prescribed by specialists for serious resistant infections. Never self-medicate, share it, or take leftover medicine for another illness.

  • Complete the full course exactly as prescribed but do not take it for longer than instructed; both misuse and over-long use are harmful.
  • Antibiotic resistance is a serious and growing crisis in Bangladesh, and reserve antibiotics like linezolid must be protected by careful, correct use.
  • Blood counts can fall with longer courses, so regular blood tests may be needed.
  • Tell your doctor about antidepressants (serotonin drugs) and tyramine-rich foods, and report numbness, tingling or vision changes.

Drug Interactions

Linezolid acts as a mild MAO inhibitor, so it has important interactions. Tell your doctor about everything you take. It can interact with:

  • Antidepressants (SSRIs, SNRIs, tricyclics) and other serotonin drugs — risk of dangerous serotonin syndrome
  • Pseudoephedrine and other decongestants, and some blood-pressure medicines — blood pressure may rise sharply
  • Foods and drinks rich in tyramine (mature cheese, soy sauce, fermented or pickled foods, draught beer)
  • Other medicines that lower blood counts

Do not start any new medicine, including over-the-counter cold remedies, without checking with your doctor.

Contraindications

Do not take Linezolid unless your specialist has specifically assessed you, and avoid it if you:

  • Are allergic to linezolid
  • Take or recently took an MAOI antidepressant, or take other serotonin drugs that your doctor has not reviewed
  • Have uncontrolled high blood pressure, certain heart or thyroid conditions, or a phaeochromocytoma

Caution is needed with uncontrolled blood pressure and serotonin drugs. Always share your full medical and medicine history before starting.

Pregnancy & Lactation

There is limited safety information on linezolid in pregnancy, so it is used only if clearly necessary and when a specialist decides the benefit outweighs the risk.

It may pass into breast milk, so breastfeeding is generally not advised during treatment unless your doctor judges it essential. If you are pregnant, think you might be, are planning a pregnancy or are breastfeeding, tell your doctor before taking Zolivox IV Infusion so the safest possible plan can be made for you and your baby.

Storage Conditions

Store Zolivox IV Infusion in a cool, dry place below 30°C, away from light and moisture.

  • Keep tablets in their original pack, protected from light.
  • Any oral suspension should be stored as directed on the label and used within the stated period.
  • Keep all medicines out of the reach of children.
  • Do not use after the expiry date; return unused medicine to a pharmacy for safe disposal.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Zolivox IV Infusion called a reserve antibiotic, and can I stop it early?

<p>Zolivox IV Infusion contains linezolid, kept in reserve for serious infections caused by resistant bacteria when other antibiotics fail. Using it carelessly could let bacteria become resistant to one of our last-line treatments. <strong>Do not stop it early.</strong> Even if you feel better, finish the full course your specialist prescribed, so the infection is fully cleared and resistance is not encouraged. Stopping early or misusing reserve antibiotics worsens <strong>antibiotic resistance</strong>, a serious and growing crisis in Bangladesh. Always follow your specialist's instructions exactly.</p>

Can I take my antidepressant or cold medicine with Zolivox IV Infusion?

<p>Not without telling your doctor. Linezolid acts like a mild MAO inhibitor, so combining it with antidepressants (such as SSRIs), some cold and decongestant medicines, or tyramine-rich foods like mature cheese and soy sauce can cause dangerous reactions — including <em>serotonin syndrome</em> (agitation, fever, shivering, fast heartbeat) or a sudden rise in blood pressure. Give your doctor a full list of every medicine and supplement you take before starting Zolivox IV Infusion, and avoid over-the-counter cold remedies unless your doctor approves them.</p>

Do I need blood tests while taking Zolivox IV Infusion?

<p>Often yes, especially if you take it for more than about two weeks. Linezolid can lower your blood counts, reducing the cells that fight infection, carry oxygen and help clotting. Your doctor may arrange regular blood tests to check this. Tell your doctor straight away if you notice unusual bruising or bleeding, extreme tiredness, paleness, or new numbness, tingling or changes in your vision. Do not take Zolivox IV Infusion for longer than your specialist prescribes, as longer courses raise these risks.</p>

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