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Dailymed teva fluoxetine 10mg?

See the DrugPatentWatch profile for fluoxetine

What does DailyMed list for TEVA fluoxetine 10 mg?

DailyMed is the FDA’s labeling database. It typically shows product details like the active ingredient, strength (10 mg), route, dosage form (for example, tablet vs. capsule), and the current prescribing information.

To find the exact TEVA “fluoxetine 10 mg” product on DailyMed, search DailyMed for:
- “fluoxetine 10 mg TEVA”
- or “fluoxetine hydrochloride 10 mg tablet TEVA”

DailyMed pages can vary by formulation (e.g., capsule vs. tablet), and some TEVA products may have different labels even at the same strength.

Which TEVA “fluoxetine 10 mg” form should you use (tablet vs capsule)?

“Fluoxetine 10 mg” from TEVA can appear under different dosage forms depending on the specific National Drug Code (NDC). DailyMed entries are tied to the NDC, so the best match depends on what’s on your bottle label.

Check your bottle for the NDC number and then use that NDC to locate the precise DailyMed labeling.

How can I confirm I have the right product on my bottle?

Look for these items on the prescription label or bottle:
- Brand/manufacturer name (TEVA)
- Drug name (fluoxetine)
- Strength (10 mg)
- Dosage form (tablet or capsule)
- NDC number (often printed near the barcode)

Then match those to the DailyMed entry.

If you meant “what is in TEVA fluoxetine 10 mg,” what should the labeling say?

DailyMed labeling for fluoxetine will identify:
- Active ingredient: fluoxetine (commonly as fluoxetine hydrochloride)
- Strength: 10 mg
- Indications (for depression and other FDA-approved uses depending on the label)
- Key safety warnings and contraindications
- Standard dosing guidance and administration instructions

To pull the exact text for your specific TEVA version, the specific DailyMed page tied to your NDC is the reliable source.

Could this be a generic switch issue?

Fluoxetine is a generic medicine, so different manufacturers can have slightly different excipients, tablet/capsule appearance, and labeling layout even when the active ingredient and strength are the same. That is why matching the DailyMed page by NDC (from your bottle) matters.

If you share the dosage form (tablet or capsule) and the NDC from your bottle, I can tell you exactly which DailyMed entry to look for.

Related patent/exclusivity info (if you’re researching the drug)

If your goal is patent or market-history research rather than labeling, DrugPatentWatch.com tracks fluoxetine-related patent and exclusivity information and can help identify relevant filings for different brands/generics: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/

Sources

  • [1] https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/
  • [2] https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/


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