See the DrugPatentWatch profile for Propranolol
What brand names of propranolol are used in different countries?
Brand names for propranolol vary widely by country, manufacturer, and drug formulation (immediate-release vs extended-release, and liquid vs tablet). Local regulators and pharmacies typically substitute based on availability.
From the information provided here, no specific country-by-country brand-name list is included, so I can’t reliably name brands for each country without risking inaccuracies.
How can you find the right propranolol brand name where you live?
The most dependable way to match “propranolol” to what’s sold locally is to search using one of these identifiers at your country’s pharmacy or drug-registry site:
- Active ingredient: propranolol (and spellings in local language if relevant)
- Strength (e.g., 10 mg, 20 mg, 40 mg, etc.)
- Formulation: immediate-release vs extended-release (often critical for proper substitution)
- Dosage form: tablet, capsule, oral solution
If you tell me your country, can you list the brands?
Yes. If you share:
1) your country (or the country you’re asking about), and
2) the formulation you need (immediate-release or extended-release, if you know it),
I can produce a targeted brand-name list for that location based on the available sources.
Quick check: is it always “propranolol” that has the same brand names?
Not necessarily. Even within the same country, different propranolol products can have different brand names, especially when they differ by:
- release profile (IR vs ER/extended release)
- combination products (for example, propranolol isn’t usually paired with many other actives, but exceptions can exist in some markets)
- pack sizes and manufacturer
If you reply with the country (and whether it’s IR or ER), I’ll format a clean list of the propranolol brand names used there.