| Unwanted effects occur mainly at the start of treatment, if the dosage is raised too rapidly, if large doses are employed, or in elderly patients. They are often transitory and can be attenuated or eliminated by reducing the dosage; they are seldom severe enough to necessitate withdrawal of the medication.• Central nervous system: Particularly at the start of treatment, unwanted effects such as daytime sedation, drowsiness, and nausea may frequently occur. Also occasionally encountered are dryness of the mouth, respiratory depression, light-headedness, lassitude, exhaustion, mental confusion, dizziness, retching, vomiting, headache and insomnia.Should nausea persist following a reduction in dosage, it is recommended that Baclofen be ingested with food or a milk drink. • Neurological and/or psychiatric manifestations which have occasionally or rarely been reported include: euphoria, depressive states, paraesthesia, myalgia, muscular weakness, ataxia, tremor, nystagmus, accommodation disorders, hallucinations, nightmares. It is often difficult to distinguish between these manifestations and those of the disease under treatment. Lowering of the convulsion threshold and attacks of convulsions may possibly occur, particularly in epileptic patients.• Gastrointestinal tract: Frequently nausea. Occasionally, mild gastrointestinal disturbances (constipation, diarrhoea).• Cardiovascular system: Occasionally, hypotension, cardiovascular depression.• Urogenital system: Occasionally or rarely, dysuria, frequency of micturition and enuresis are reported frequently. It is often difficult to distinguish between these manifestations and those of the disease under treatment.• Other unwanted effects: In rare or isolated cases visual disturbances, alterations in the taste sensation, hyperhidrosis, skin rash, deterioration in liver function tests. There have been rare reports of hypothermia.Certain patients have shown increased spasticity as a paradoxical reaction to the medication.An undesirable degree of muscular hypotonia - making it more difficult for patients to walk or fend for themselves - may occur and can usually be relieved by re-adjusting the dosage (ie by reducing the doses given during the day and possibly increasing the evening dose). | |