What is “Trader 3 Avapro”?
“Avapro” is a brand name for irbesartan, a blood-pressure medicine (an angiotensin II receptor blocker, or ARB). The phrase “Trader 3” isn’t a standard medical term or a widely used label in major drug references, so its meaning depends on where you saw it (for example, a specific pharmacy inventory code, a trade-line/packaging description, or a seller’s listing).
Is “Trader 3” a different version or strength of Avapro?
I can’t confirm that from the limited text provided. In general, what varies between versions of a brand medicine is usually one of these:
- Strength (for example, 75 mg, 150 mg, 300 mg)
- Form (tablet vs. another dosage form)
- Manufacturer / packaging (who makes the product under the same active ingredient)
- Generic vs. brand (irbesartan generics vs. Avapro)
If you share the exact wording from the label/listing (and the strength in mg), I can help identify what “Trader 3” likely refers to and whether it matches the usual Avapro/irbesartan product line.
How to verify what you actually have (fast checks)
Look for:
- The active ingredient: should say irbesartan
- The mg strength on the tablet bottle/blister
- The manufacturer name and NDC (if you’re in the US)
- Any code next to the product name that could be a store/import/manufacturer identifier
Why this matters for patients
Even when two products sound similar, you want to confirm:
- Same active ingredient (irbesartan)
- Same strength
- Same dose schedule
- No mix-up with a different drug class
Taking the wrong strength or a different medicine can change blood-pressure control and side-effect risk.
What I need from you
Reply with any of the following and I’ll narrow it down:
1) Where you saw “Trader 3 Avapro” (receipt, online listing, pharmacy label, etc.)
2) The tablet strength (mg)
3) Any NDC or manufacturer name on the package
4) Your country (US/Canada/UK/etc.)