What are the inactive ingredients in Aurobindo quetiapine 300 mg?
The information needed to answer this depends on the exact Aurobindo product name and formulation strength that matches “quetiapine 300 mg.” Inactive ingredients (excipients) can vary by country, manufacturer, tablet coating type, and whether it is immediate-release vs. extended-release.
To give you the correct list, I need one of the following:
- the exact product label text (for example, “Quetiapine 300 mg tablets” and whether it says “prolonged-release/modified-release”), or
- a photo of the “Inactive ingredients” section from the package insert, or
- the country and the specific Aurobindo product name/code printed on the box/bottle.
How to find the inactive-ingredients list on your package/bottle
Look for wording like “inactive ingredients,” “excipients,” or “contains.” It’s often in:
- the patient leaflet/package insert under “composition,” or
- the pharmacy label/box listing under “each tablet contains…”
Why the list might differ for “300 mg” quetiapine
Even at the same strength (300 mg), excipients can differ if the tablet is:
- immediate-release vs. extended/prolonged-release, or
- a film-coated vs. other coating system, or
- a different Aurobindo legal entity/market (formulations are not always identical worldwide).
If you tell me your exact product, I’ll list the excipients
Reply with the exact wording on the package (including “XR/prolonged-release/modified-release,” if shown) and the country, and I’ll extract the inactive ingredients for that specific Aurobindo quetiapine 300 mg version.