Description
Provanol 20mg Tablet (Propranolol 20mg) — Complete Clinical and Patient Information Guide
Product Overview
Provanol 20mg Tablet (Propranolol 20mg) contains Propranolol Hydrochloride 20mg as its active pharmaceutical ingredient, belonging to the non-selective beta-adrenoceptor antagonist — first-generation beta-blocker. It is clinically indicated for hypertension, angina pectoris, cardiac arrhythmias (SVT, AF rate control), post-MI cardioprotection, migraine prophylaxis, essential tremor, anxiety (performance anxiety, situational), portal hypertension (bleeding prophylaxis), hyperthyroidism symptom control, hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. This guide has been prepared in accordance with YMYL (Your Money Your Life) content standards, drawing on regulatory prescribing information, peer-reviewed pharmacological literature, and established cardiovascular clinical guidelines.
Provanol 20mg contains Propranolol 20mg, providing evidence-based beta-adrenoceptor blocking therapy for cardiovascular conditions. Beta-blockers remain foundational components of cardiovascular pharmacotherapy — supported by the highest levels of clinical evidence from landmark outcome trials for heart failure (MERIT-HF, COPERNICUS), post-MI protection, arrhythmia management, and angina relief.
About Provanol 20mg and Its Active Ingredient
Propranolol Hydrochloride 20mg is the pharmacologically active compound in Provanol 20mg. Cardiovascular medications are among the most safety-critical drugs prescribed — interactions with other heart medications, anticoagulants, and antihypertensives can have life-threatening consequences, and abrupt discontinuation of certain cardiac drugs (beta-blockers, anticoagulants) without medical guidance can precipitate dangerous rebound phenomena. All cardiovascular pharmacotherapy decisions require specialist or physician oversight, with regular monitoring and dose optimisation based on clinical response, ECG findings, blood pressure recordings, and relevant biochemical parameters.
Mechanism of Action
Propranolol is the prototypical non-selective beta-adrenoceptor antagonist — the first clinically available beta-blocker — with equal affinity for beta-1 (cardiac) and beta-2 (pulmonary, vascular, metabolic) adrenoceptors. By competitively blocking catecholamine binding at both receptor subtypes, propranolol produces: (1) Cardiac effects through beta-1 blockade — reduced heart rate (chronotropy), reduced contractility (inotropy), decreased sinoatrial automaticity and atrioventricular conduction velocity, and reduced renin secretion from juxtaglomerular cells; (2) Vascular/pulmonary effects through beta-2 blockade — bronchoconstriction (contraindicated in asthma/COPD), inhibition of hepatic glycogenolysis and glucagon-stimulated glycogenolysis, and blunting of tremor through CNS/peripheral beta-2 pathways. Propranolol additionally has membrane-stabilising (local anaesthetic) activity and crosses the blood-brain barrier (producing CNS effects including anxiolysis, nightmares). For angina, the anti-anginal effect comes from reducing cardiac oxygen demand through reduced heart rate and contractility. For arrhythmias, reduced automaticity and conduction velocity suppress both supraventricular and ventricular arrhythmias. For hypertension, reduced cardiac output and renin-angiotensin suppression lower blood pressure. For migraine prophylaxis, the mechanism likely involves inhibition of serotonergic and catecholaminergic triggers of spreading cortical depression.
A clear understanding of the pharmacological mechanism helps explain the clinical requirements: why timing, dose titration, monitoring, drug interactions, and contraindications exist. Healthcare providers use mechanistic knowledge to individualise therapy, anticipate interactions, and monitor for treatment response and toxicity.
Clinical Indications
Provanol 20mg Tablet (Propranolol 20mg) is clinically indicated for:
- Primary indication: hypertension, angina pectoris, cardiac arrhythmias (SVT, AF rate control), post-MI cardioprotection, migraine prophylaxis, essential tremor, anxiety (performance anxiety, situational), portal hypertension (bleeding prophylaxis), hyperthyroidism symptom control, hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy
- Specialist assessment required: Cardiovascular drug therapy must be initiated and monitored by a qualified cardiologist, physician, or specialist. Self-diagnosis and self-treatment of cardiac conditions is dangerous and may delay life-saving treatment.
Dosage and Administration
Propranolol IR requires 2–3 times daily dosing due to short half-life. For hypertension/angina: 40–160mg/day in divided doses. For migraine prophylaxis: start 20–40mg twice daily; target 80–160mg/day. For anxiety/tremor: 10–40mg as needed. For portal hypertension: 20–40mg twice daily, titrated to reduce resting pulse by 25%.
Never adjust the dose or stop cardiovascular medications without consulting your prescribing physician. Abrupt withdrawal of beta-blockers, anticoagulants, and anti-anginal drugs can cause dangerous rebound phenomena including angina exacerbation, myocardial infarction, and thromboembolic events.
Who Should Use Provanol 20mg
Provanol 20mg is indicated for adult patients in whom the relevant cardiovascular condition has been confirmed by clinical assessment and appropriate investigations (ECG, echocardiogram, cardiac biomarkers, blood pressure recording, coagulation studies as applicable) and in whom this specific pharmacological approach has been determined to be clinically appropriate after benefit-risk assessment.
Contraindications
Severe bradycardia or sick sinus syndrome. High-degree AV block (second or third degree) without pacemaker. Severe decompensated heart failure (acute/unstable — stable HFrEF is an indication). Significant bronchospasm or severe asthma (non-selective beta-blockers absolute; cardioselective relatively contraindicated). Significant peripheral arterial disease (relative). Cardiogenic shock. Hypersensitivity. Non-selective beta-blockers additionally: avoid in patients with reactive airways disease (asthma, active bronchospasm — beta-2 blockade causes bronchoconstriction). Caution in severe peripheral vascular disease. Avoid in insulin-requiring diabetics where hypoglycaemia episodes are frequent (masks tachycardia warning sign).
Drug Interactions
Antiarrhythmics (amiodarone, flecainide): additive depression of conduction. Calcium channel blockers (verapamil, diltiazem): severe bradycardia and AV block — avoid IV combination; oral combination under monitoring only. Insulin and sulphonylureas: masks hypoglycaemia tachycardia. NSAIDs: reduce antihypertensive effect. Ergotamine: additive peripheral vasoconstriction. Clonidine: concurrent withdrawal of clonidine while on propranolol can cause severe rebound hypertension — taper clonidine before propranolol.
Cardiovascular drugs have numerous clinically significant, potentially dangerous drug interactions. A comprehensive medication review by a cardiologist or clinical pharmacist is essential before initiating or changing any cardiac medication. Patients must inform all healthcare providers (including dentists, surgeons, and emergency physicians) of all their cardiovascular medications.
Adverse Effects
Common: Fatigue, bradycardia, cold extremities, dizziness, and sleep disturbance (nightmares — particularly with lipophilic agents crossing the BBB like propranolol, metoprolol). Uncommon: Bronchoconstriction (non-selective > cardioselective), sexual dysfunction, depression, and masking of hypoglycaemic symptoms in diabetics. Rare: Severe bradyarrhythmia, AV block, acute heart failure decompensation (with rapid dose escalation in already-compromised heart).
CNS effects of propranolol: Propranolol crosses the blood-brain barrier more than cardioselective beta-blockers — nightmares, sleep disturbance, depression, and fatigue are more common than with atenolol or bisoprolol. The anxiolytic effect (useful for performance anxiety) is also mediated through central beta-blockade.
Special Population Considerations
Non-selective beta-blockade cautions: Propranolol’s non-selective beta-2 blockade prevents bronchodilator response to beta-2 agonists and can cause potentially severe bronchoconstriction — contraindicated in asthma and severe COPD. Migraine use: For migraine prophylaxis, the benefit of propranolol is supported by multiple RCTs and is first-line in international headache guidelines. Typical time to full migraine prophylaxis benefit: 6–12 weeks. Essential tremor: 40–320mg/day provides clinically meaningful tremor reduction. Do not stop abruptly — rebound angina, tachycardia, and hypertension can occur. Taper over 1–2 weeks under medical supervision.
Storage and Handling
Store Provanol 20mg at room temperature (15–25°C) in a dry location away from direct sunlight, heat, and moisture. Keep in original packaging out of reach of children. Do not use beyond the printed expiry date. Nitroglycerin preparations require special storage in airtight glass containers away from heat — plastic and light degrade GTN. Enoxaparin: store at room temperature; do not freeze.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How should I store this medication?
A: Store at room temperature (15–25°C), away from direct sunlight, heat, and moisture. Keep in original packaging out of reach of children. Do not use after the expiry date.
Q: What should I do if I miss a dose?
A: Take the missed dose as soon as you remember unless it is nearly time for the next scheduled dose. Never double-dose. Do not stop beta-blockers, anticoagulants, or anti-anginal medications abruptly without medical advice.
Q: Why is propranolol used for migraine prevention?
A: Propranolol prevents migraine through multiple mechanisms: beta-2 receptor-mediated inhibition of catecholamine-triggered spreading cortical depression; central 5-HT receptor modulation reducing serotonergic migraine triggers; prevention of arterial vasodilation in the trigeminovascular pathway; and anti-anxiety effects reducing stress-triggered migraines. It is the most extensively studied and widely used pharmacological migraine preventive globally, recommended as first-line in UK (NICE), US, and European headache guidelines.
Evidence Base and Cardiovascular Guidelines
The active ingredient in Provanol 20mg has been evaluated in landmark randomised controlled trials and is supported by major international cardiovascular guidelines including those from the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA), American Heart Association, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), and relevant national cardiovascular specialist bodies. These guidelines represent evidence-based consensus on optimal pharmacological management of cardiovascular conditions and are regularly updated as new clinical evidence emerges.
Cardiovascular disease management has undergone transformative advances over the past three decades — from the landmark MERIT-HF, CAPRICORN, and EMPHASIS-HF trials establishing guideline-directed medical therapy for heart failure, to the COURAGE trial for stable angina, EINSTEIN for anticoagulation, and ADVANCE-HF for newer agents. Patients benefit most when their individual pharmacotherapy aligns with current evidence-based guidelines.
Patient Counselling Points
- Never stop abruptly: Beta-blockers, anti-anginal drugs, and anticoagulants must never be stopped suddenly without medical guidance — abrupt withdrawal can trigger angina rebound, myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, or thromboembolic events.
- Carry a medication list: All patients on cardiovascular drugs should carry a current medication list for any medical encounter — including surgical, dental, and emergency care. Drug interactions in cardiovascular patients can be life-threatening.
- Regular monitoring: Blood pressure, ECG, renal function, electrolytes (for diuretics), INR (for warfarin), platelet count (for heparins), and cardiac biomarkers as appropriate should be monitored at intervals determined by your cardiologist.
- Lifestyle integration: Pharmacotherapy delivers best results alongside appropriate lifestyle modification: Mediterranean diet, regular aerobic exercise, smoking cessation, moderate alcohol, sodium restriction for hypertension and heart failure.
Cardiovascular Disease Context and Clinical Management Principles
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of death globally, responsible for approximately 18 million deaths annually — representing 32% of all global mortality. Coronary artery disease, heart failure, hypertension, stroke, and peripheral arterial disease collectively impose an enormous burden of mortality, morbidity, and reduced quality of life worldwide. The last five decades have witnessed transformative advances in cardiovascular pharmacotherapy — from the introduction of beta-blockers and ACE inhibitors, through the development of statins and thrombolytics, to the current era of guideline-directed medical therapy with proven mortality-reducing agents for heart failure, and novel anticoagulants revolutionising stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation.
Effective cardiovascular disease management requires integration of pharmacological therapy with lifestyle modification (Mediterranean diet, regular aerobic exercise, smoking cessation, alcohol moderation, sodium restriction), risk factor control (blood pressure, lipid management, glycaemic control, weight management), and appropriate interventional or surgical procedures where indicated. Pharmacotherapy alone, without lifestyle integration and risk factor management, provides suboptimal benefit — drugs and lifestyle modification are synergistic, not alternative, approaches.
Hypertension: The Silent Cardiovascular Risk Factor
Hypertension affects approximately 1.28 billion adults worldwide, yet only 21% of hypertensive adults have their blood pressure adequately controlled. Uncontrolled hypertension is the leading modifiable risk factor for stroke, coronary artery disease, heart failure, renal failure, and peripheral arterial disease. The relationship between blood pressure and cardiovascular risk is continuous — even high-normal blood pressure (130–139/85–89 mmHg) carries increased cardiovascular risk compared to optimal levels.
Current international guidelines (ESC/ESH, ACC/AHA, NICE) recommend initial drug therapy for hypertension with one of three evidence-based drug classes: angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs); calcium channel blockers (CCBs); or thiazide/thiazide-like diuretics. Most patients with stage 2 hypertension (≥160/100 mmHg) require combination therapy from initial diagnosis. Fixed-dose combination tablets — such as those in this product range — improve adherence and simplify therapy for patients requiring multiple agents.
Angina Pectoris: Management Principles
Stable angina pectoris affects over 110 million people globally and represents myocardial ischaemia occurring predictably with exertion or emotional stress, relieved by rest or sublingual nitroglycerin within minutes. The management goal is threefold: symptom relief, prevention of disease progression and MI, and improvement of quality of life. First-line symptomatic therapy uses beta-blockers and/or calcium channel blockers as rate-limiting or vasodilatory agents; long-acting nitrates or nicorandil are added when first-line therapy is insufficient. For resistant symptoms, trimetazidine or ivabradine (when HR remains elevated) provide additional anti-anginal mechanisms. When pharmacological therapy fails to control symptoms adequately, coronary revascularisation (PCI or CABG) should be considered.
Quality Standards and Evidence Base
The active ingredients in products in this range have been evaluated in landmark randomised controlled trials that form the foundation of evidence-based cardiovascular medicine: MERIT-HF (metoprolol succinate in HFrEF), CAPRICORN and COPERNICUS (carvedilol in post-MI LV dysfunction and HFrEF), BEAUTIFUL (ivabradine in stable CAD), SIGNIFY (ivabradine in stable angina), EINSTEIN (enoxaparin in VTE), EXTRACT-TIMI 25 (enoxaparin in STEMI), and IONA (nicorandil in stable angina). Major cardiovascular guidelines from the ESC, ACC/AHA, and NICE incorporate these drugs into evidence-based treatment algorithms based on the totality of this evidence.
Products are manufactured in compliance with Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) standards required by national and international pharmaceutical regulatory authorities, ensuring consistent quality, identity, strength, and purity. Patients should always obtain prescription cardiovascular medications from licensed pharmacies with valid prescriptions to ensure receipt of authentic, properly stored, quality-assured products.
Important Medical Disclaimer
This product information guide is provided for general educational purposes only, prepared in accordance with YMYL (Your Money Your Life) content standards. All information draws on regulatory prescribing information, peer-reviewed cardiology literature, and established clinical guidelines. It does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a qualified cardiologist, physician, or pharmacist. Cardiovascular drug therapy decisions must be individualised by a licensed healthcare provider with full knowledge of the patient’s cardiac status, comorbidities, and concurrent medications. Self-diagnosis and self-treatment of cardiovascular conditions can be dangerous and life-threatening. Always consult a qualified cardiologist or physician before starting, changing, or stopping any cardiovascular medication.

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