Hypertension:

Indications for: Moexipril HCl

Hypertension.

Adult Dosage:

Take 1 hr before meals. Initially and if not on diuretics: 7.5mg once daily; usual range 7.5–30mg/day in 1–2 divided doses. If on diuretic: suspend diuretic for 2–3 days before starting therapy; resume diuretic if BP not controlled by moexipril alone. If diuretic cannot be discontinued: initially 3.75mg once daily. CrCl ≤40mL/min: initially 3.75mg once daily; max 15mg/day.

Children Dosage:

Not established.

Moexipril HCl Contraindications:

History of ACEI-associated or other angioedema. Concomitant aliskiren in patients with diabetes.

Boxed Warning:

Fetal toxicity.

Moexipril HCl Warnings/Precautions:

Fetal toxicity may develop; discontinue if pregnancy is detected. Hepatic impairment. Renal impairment: monitor for worsening renal function. Hypovolemia. Correct salt/volume depletion before starting therapy. CHF. Renal artery or aortic stenosis. Cerebrovascular or ischemic heart disease. Diabetes. Dialysis (esp. high-flux membrane). Surgery. Monitor WBCs in collagen vascular disease. Discontinue if angioedema, laryngeal edema, jaundice or markedly elevated liver enzymes occurs. Neonates. Pregnancy (Cat.D); monitor. Nursing mothers: not recommended.

Moexipril HCl Classification:

ACE inhibitor.

Moexipril HCl Interactions:

See Contraindications. Dual inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system with ARBs, ACEIs, or aliskiren may increase risk of hypotension, hyperkalemia, renal function changes; monitor closely. Concomitant aliskiren in renal impairment (CrCl <60mL/min): not recommended. Hyperkalemia with K+ supplements, K+ sparing diuretics, K+ containing salt substitutes. Excessive hypotension with diuretics. May be antagonized by, and renal toxicity potentiated by NSAIDs (including COX-2 inhibitors): monitor renal function in elderly and/or volume-depleted. May increase lithium levels; monitor. Nitritoid reactions with concomitant injectable gold (eg, sodium aurothiomalate); rare.

Adverse Reactions:

Cough, dizziness, diarrhea, flu syndrome, fatigue, pharyngitis, flushing, rash, myalgia; angioedema (eg, intestinal), hyperkalemia, hyponatremia; rare: hepatic failure.

Note:

Formerly known under the brand name Univasc.

Metabolism:

Hepatic.

Drug Elimination:

Fecal, renal.

How Supplied:

Contact supplier