What is “Lupin ranitidine” with NDC 68180?
I can’t identify the exact product from the information “Lupin ranitidine ndc 68180” alone, because NDCs must match a specific label strength and package configuration (and ranitidine products were also pulled from the market in many places). To give you the right drug details (strength, dosage form, and manufacturer), I need the full NDC number as printed on the box or a second piece of info.
Please reply with one of these:
- The full NDC (usually 10 or 11 digits, sometimes shown with 3-5-2 formatting like “xxx-xxxx-xx”), or
- The strength and dosage form (e.g., tablets 150 mg, tablets 300 mg, syrup), or
- A photo/text of what’s on the package label (company name + strength).
Is ranitidine still available in the U.S.?
Ranitidine (including brands and generic versions) has been removed from the U.S. market due to contamination concerns related to NDMA. If your goal is to find where it’s available or how to replace it, tell me your dose and what you’re taking it for (GERD, ulcer, heartburn), and I can suggest common alternatives people use (for example famotidine, depending on your situation and your clinician’s advice).
Why the NDC may not uniquely identify the exact product
Even when the first part looks similar, an NDC can differ by:
- strength (e.g., 150 mg vs 300 mg),
- dosage form (tablet vs liquid),
- packaging size (counts/mL),
- and sometimes labeling/manufacturer details.
That’s why “NDC 68180” by itself may not be enough to pin down the exact listing.
What I can do once you share the exact NDC
With the complete NDC and strength/dosage form, I can help you find:
- the exact Lupin listing (product description),
- what it was used for on the label,
- typical dosing guidance from the label (if you want that),
- and whether it was discontinued/withdrawn and what alternatives are closest.
Send the full NDC and strength/dosage form you see on the package.
Sources
No sources were provided in your message, so I didn’t cite any.