Isosorbide Mononitrate Lyophilized Injection

Product/Composition Isosorbide Mononitrate Lyophilized Injection
Strength 25mg, 50mg
Form Lyophilized Injection
Production Capacity 1 Million Lyophilized Injection/Month
Therapeutic use Cardiovascular
Package Insert/Leaflet Available upon request

What It Is

Isosorbide Mononitrate Lyophilized Injection is a medication used to treat angina pectoris (chest pain due to reduced blood flow to the heart) and certain heart-related conditions.
It belongs to a class of drugs called nitrates, which work as vasodilators — they relax and widen blood vessels.

The term lyophilized means the drug is provided in a freeze-dried powder form, which is reconstituted with a suitable liquid before being given as an injection.

Composition

  • Active ingredient: Isosorbide mononitrate

  • Form: Lyophilized powder in a vial

  • Route: Intravenous (IV) injection or infusion after reconstitution

How It Works

Isosorbide mononitrate releases nitric oxide in the body, which:

  • Relaxes smooth muscles in blood vessels

  • Dilates veins and arteries

  • Reduces preload (blood returning to the heart) and afterload (resistance heart pumps against)

  • Improves blood and oxygen flow to the heart muscle
    This reduces chest pain and workload on the heart.

Uses / Indications

It is used for:

  • Acute relief or prevention of angina attacks

  • Management of heart failure (as part of combination therapy)

  • Post–myocardial infarction (heart attack) care in some cases

  • Unstable angina when rapid nitrate therapy is needed

Administration

  • Given by slow IV injection or IV infusion

  • Dose is adjusted based on blood pressure, heart rate, and clinical response

  • Must be reconstituted with sterile diluent under aseptic conditions before administration

Benefits

  • Rapid onset of action compared to oral forms

  • Useful in emergency or hospital settings where oral tablets are not suitable

  • Helps quickly relieve chest pain and reduce cardiac stress

Possible Side Effects

Common side effects:

  • Headache (very common with nitrates)

  • Dizziness or lightheadedness

  • Low blood pressure

  • Flushing (warmth, redness of skin)

Rare but serious effects:

  • Severe hypotension (very low blood pressure)

  • Rapid heart rate (reflex tachycardia)

  • Allergic reaction (rare)

Precautions

  • Not used in patients with severe hypotension, shock, or increased intracranial pressure

  • Should never be combined with phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors (e.g., sildenafil/Viagra) — risk of dangerous blood pressure drop

  • Blood pressure must be monitored closely during infusion