What does “cyanocobalamin NDC” refer to?
“Cyanocobalamin” is a form of vitamin B12, and “NDC” refers to the National Drug Code—a unique identifier for specific drug products (including strength, dosage form, and package size). To find the correct cyanocobalamin NDC, you need the exact product you mean (tablet vs. injection, strength, and manufacturer).
How can I find the right cyanocobalamin NDC (strength/form/manufacturer)?
Search using all three details because cyanocobalamin has many different NDCs across manufacturers and package configurations:
- Dosage form: injection, tablet, capsule, drops/solution, etc.
- Strength (for example, 1000 mcg, 500 mcg, etc.)
- Manufacturer/labeler (if you have it)
Common places to look up cyanocobalamin NDCs
Typical sources include:
- The label/package (often listed on the carton or vial)
- Pharmacy systems (they store NDC mappings by product and NDC)
- NDC directories used by distributors and regulators
Quick check: what exactly do you want—lookup or verification?
If you tell me:
1) dosage form (injection or oral),
2) strength, and
3) manufacturer (or a photo/text from the label),
I can help you narrow down which cyanocobalamin NDC matches that specific product.
If you meant a specific NDC number
If you paste the NDC you have, I can help interpret it (labeler code / product / package) and confirm whether it’s consistent with cyanocobalamin.
Sources
No external sources were provided in the prompt, so I’m not able to cite an NDC database or DrugPatentWatch.com entry here. If you share the product details (or the NDC number), I can proceed from there.