Product Description
Tamol-X 225mg
Tamol-X 225mg is a prescription medication commonly available in regions like India and parts of Asia. Here’s a clear breakdown based on reliable pharmacological data:
What It Is
- Active Ingredient: Tramadol hydrochloride (225 mg per tablet or capsule).
- Drug Class: Opioid analgesic (centrally acting synthetic opioid).
- Forms: Extended-release (ER) tablets for prolonged pain relief; not for immediate-release use.
Primary Uses
- Moderate to severe acute or chronic pain (e.g., post-surgical, injury-related, cancer pain, or neuropathic pain).
- Sometimes used off-label for restless legs syndrome or fibromyalgia.
- Not for mild pain or as a first-line treatment—reserved for when non-opioids fail.
How It Works
Tramadol binds to mu-opioid receptors in the brain and spinal cord to block pain signals. It also inhibits norepinephrine and serotonin reuptake, enhancing its pain-relieving effects (dual mechanism, similar to tapentadol but weaker).
Dosage Guidelines (Adults)
| Condition | Typical Starting Dose | Max Daily Dose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute Pain | 50-100 mg every 4-6 hours (IR form; not this ER version) | 400 mg | Titrate slowly. |
| Chronic Pain | 100-225 mg once daily (ER like Tamol-X) | 400 mg | Swallow whole; don’t crush/chew. Adjust for elderly/kidney issues. |
| Renal Impairment | Reduce to 50-100 mg/day | 200 mg | Monitor closely. |
- Duration: Short-term use preferred to minimize dependence risk. Taper off gradually.
- Evidence: Supported by studies like those in The Lancet (2004) showing efficacy comparable to codeine + paracetamol for moderate pain, with NNT ~4.6 for 50% pain relief.
Side Effects
| Common (10-20%) | Serious (Seek Immediate Help) |
|---|---|
| Nausea, dizziness, constipation, headache, drowsiness | Respiratory depression, seizures (risk ↑ with >400 mg/day or SSRIs), serotonin syndrome, addiction/overdose |
| Dry mouth, sweating | Hypersensitivity (rash, anaphylaxis), hallucinations |
- Overdose Risk: High—symptoms include coma, slowed breathing. Naloxone reverses it partially.
Warnings & Interactions
- Contraindications: Recent MAOI use, severe respiratory depression, acute intoxication, uncontrolled epilepsy.
- Interactions:
| Drug/Class | Effect |
|---|---|
| SSRIs/SNRIs (e.g., sertraline) | ↑ Seizure/serotonin syndrome risk |
| Alcohol/Benzos | ↑ Sedation/respiratory depression |
| CYP2D6 inhibitors (e.g., fluoxetine) | Reduced efficacy |
| Warfarin | ↑ Bleeding risk |
- Dependence: Schedule IV controlled substance (moderate abuse potential). Withdrawal like flu-like symptoms + anxiety.
- Pregnancy: Category C—avoid if possible (neonatal risks).
- Driving: Impairs; avoid until effects known.
Evidence & Facts
- Efficacy: Meta-analysis in Cochrane Database (2017) confirms moderate pain relief but inferior to stronger opioids like morphine for severe pain.
- Bioavailability: ~75% oral; peak plasma 5-6 hours (ER).
- Half-Life: 6-7 hours (extend to 11+ in elderly).
- Generics: Often cheaper alternatives to brands like Ultram ER.
Important: This is general info from sources like Drugs.com, PubMed, and manufacturer data (e.g., Torrent Pharma for Tamol-X). Not medical advice—consult a doctor/pharmacist for personal use, as it requires a prescription. Misuse can be dangerous or illegal.



