What is this medicine?
This is a combination tablet for Type 2 Diabetes.
It contains:
- Glimepiride (2 mg) – increases insulin release from the pancreas.
- Metformin (850 mg) – reduces sugar production in the liver and helps your body use insulin better.
This dose is considered strong, especially because Glimepiride is 2 mg and Metformin is 850 mg.
How does it work?
1. Glimepiride (2 mg)
- Helps your pancreas release more insulin.
- Controls blood sugar mainly after eating.
- Works fast to lower high sugar.
2. Metformin (850 mg)
- Reduces liver sugar production.
- Improves insulin sensitivity (your body uses insulin better).
- Slows sugar absorption from food.
- Does not cause weight gain.
Together, they control fasting sugar + post-meal sugar effectively.
Why do doctors prescribe this combination?
Doctors choose this dose when:
- Lower doses (like 1 mg glimepiride or 500/750 mg metformin) are not enough.
- Blood sugar is moderately or strongly high.
- A patient needs better full-day sugar control.
- To reduce long-term complications of diabetes:
- Heart problems
- Kidney damage
- Nerve damage
- Eye problems
This dose gives stronger sugar control due to the higher glimepiride (2 mg).
How to take it
- Usually once or twice daily with food.
- Most common:
- Once daily with breakfast
OR - Twice daily (breakfast + dinner)
- Once daily with breakfast
- Swallow tablet whole with water.
Important:
Do NOT skip meals.
Glimepiride may cause low blood sugar if you take it but do not eat.
Common side effects
From Glimepiride (2 mg)
- Low blood sugar (hypoglycemia)
Symptoms:- Sweating
- Shaking
- Hunger
- Dizziness
- Headache
- Fast heartbeat
- Mild weight gain
From Metformin (850 mg)
- Stomach upset:
- Gas
- Nausea
- Loose stools
- Stomach discomfort
- Metallic taste
Side effects usually reduce after a few days of use.
Serious but rare side effects
- Severe low blood sugar, especially if meals are skipped.
- Lactic acidosis (rare but serious, related to Metformin)
Symptoms: severe tiredness, fast breathing, muscle pain → urgent medical help required. - Allergic reaction (rash, swelling, difficulty breathing)
Who should avoid or use this with caution
- People with severe kidney problems
- Severe liver disease
- Heavy alcohol drinkers
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women (use only if doctor approves)
- People who vomit often or have dehydration
- Those undergoing CT scan with contrast dye (may need temporary stop)
What to monitor
- Fasting blood sugar
- Post-meal sugar
- HbA1c (every 3 months)
- Kidney function tests
- Symptoms of low blood sugar
Important precautions
- Eat meals on time; do not skip food.
- Limit or avoid alcohol.
- Stay hydrated.
- Inform doctor before surgery or scan with contrast dye.
- Do not stop the medicine suddenly.



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