Posted by Viridis on September 16, 2003, at 3:12:53
In reply to WELLBUTRIN;...Breaking SR pills, Watch out... » redscarlet, posted by femlite on September 15, 2003, at 7:17:50
I've mentioned this here before, but the coating on WB SR pills has nothing whatsoever to do with the sustained-release effect.
When I was on 150 mg SR and couldn't tolerate it, I called the company and spoke to one of the people who actually developed the SR version. He explained that the drug is imbedded in a slowly-dissolving wax, and the coating disappears almost immediately in your stomach. I was told that there was no danger in cutting the pills (they researched this), but they discourage this because:
1) It's hard to get exact dosing.
2) Once cut, the med can absorb moisture from the atmosphere and lose potency.
His advice was to go ahead and cut the pills, just do only a few at a time to avoid water-absorption problems. He then faxed me graphs of uptake rates of cut vs. uncut pills, which showed a very slight increase in absorption rate in the first 15 minutes, then almost identical rates. My pdoc said this all made sense, and to try the lower dose with divided pills. It had about half the side effects, still intolerable for me.
I have no idea whether this applies to other slow-release meds, but these are the facts (from the manufacturer/developer) for Wellbutrin SR.
poster:Viridis
thread:259757
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20030912/msgs/260546.html