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Concor 5mg Tablets – Bisoprolol Standard Dose for Blood Pressure & Heart Conditions - Image 1

Concor 5mg Tablets – Bisoprolol Standard Dose for Blood Pressure & Heart Conditions

SKU: ULP-0117-5mg

Rs.370
1
100 in stock
Estimated Delivery: Fri, 29 May - Sun, 31 May

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Drug Class: Cardioselective Beta-1 Adrenoceptor Blocker | Form: Oral Tablet | Prescription Status: Prescription Only (Rx)

What Is Concor 5mg?

Concor 5mg is a prescription cardioselective beta-1 blocker containing Bisoprolol Fumarate 5mg — the standard starting and maintenance dose for hypertension and angina, and the first upward titration target in chronic heart failure management following initiation on Concor 2.5mg. While the 2.5mg strength is used specifically to initiate therapy in heart failure patients and elderly or sensitive patients, the 5mg tablet represents the dose at which most patients with hypertension and angina begin treatment and the level to which heart failure patients are carefully titrated once 2.5mg has been well tolerated for at least two weeks.

Bisoprolol's defining clinical strength is its high selectivity for beta-1 adrenoceptors in the heart — producing meaningful reductions in heart rate, blood pressure, and cardiac workload with significantly less effect on beta-2 receptors in the lungs compared to older non-selective beta-blockers. At 5mg, this cardioselectivity is well maintained — making Concor 5mg effective for cardiovascular control while remaining relatively safer in patients with mild to moderate respiratory conditions than non-selective alternatives.

Concor 5mg must never be stopped suddenly — always taper under medical supervision.

What Is Concor 5mg Used For?

Concor 5mg is prescribed for:

  • Hypertension (ہائی بلڈ پریشر) — standard first-line dose for blood pressure reduction to lower risk of heart attack, stroke, and end-organ damage — used alone or in combination with other antihypertensives
  • Angina pectoris (سینے کا درد) — prevention of chest pain episodes by reducing myocardial oxygen demand during exertion and at rest
  • Stable chronic heart failure — maintenance dose following successful titration from Concor 2.5mg in patients with moderate to severe stable chronic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction
  • Arrhythmias — rate control in atrial fibrillation, supraventricular tachycardias, and other tachyarrhythmias where heart rate reduction is clinically indicated
  • Post-myocardial infarction cardioprotection — reducing risk of recurrent cardiac events and sudden cardiac death following heart attack
  • Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy — reducing outflow tract obstruction and symptom burden under specialist supervision

How Does Concor 5mg Work?

Bisoprolol Fumarate 5mg — Cardioselective Beta-1 Blocker: Bisoprolol competitively blocks beta-1 adrenoceptors in cardiac tissue — preventing adrenaline and noradrenaline from binding and triggering their stimulatory effects on the heart. This produces a controlled reduction in heart rate, force of contraction, and electrical conduction through the AV node — reducing the heart's workload and oxygen demand across all indications.

In Hypertension: At 5mg, Bisoprolol produces clinically meaningful reductions in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure through reduced cardiac output and progressive suppression of the renin-angiotensin system. For many patients with uncomplicated hypertension, 5mg once daily achieves adequate blood pressure control — with dose escalation to 10mg reserved for those requiring additional reduction. When combined with other antihypertensives such as ACE inhibitors, ARBs, or calcium channel blockers, the 5mg dose contributes meaningfully to multi-drug blood pressure control regimens.

In Angina: The 5mg dose reliably reduces resting heart rate and blunts the exercise-induced heart rate increase that precipitates angina — allowing patients to perform more physical activity before the anginal threshold is reached. Unlike the 2.5mg dose which may be insufficient for angina symptom control in many patients, 5mg provides effective anti-anginal activity for most adults with stable coronary artery disease.

In Chronic Heart Failure: In heart failure management, 5mg represents the first dose escalation target after 2.5mg initiation. By this stage — typically 2 to 4 weeks into treatment — the heart has begun adapting to beta-blockade, allowing the dose to be safely increased. At 5mg, the cardioprotective effects of blocking chronic sympathetic overstimulation become more pronounced — progressive reverse cardiac remodelling, reduced arrhythmia risk, and improved long-term survival with continued slow titration toward the 10mg target dose.

Cardioselectivity at 5mg: Bisoprolol maintains strong beta-1 selectivity at the 5mg dose — its affinity for cardiac beta-1 receptors remains significantly higher than for bronchial beta-2 receptors at this standard therapeutic level. This selectivity provides an important safety margin for patients with mild to moderate obstructive airway disease, though close respiratory monitoring remains essential.

Dosage and Administration

⚠️ Never stop Concor 5mg suddenly — abrupt withdrawal causes dangerous rebound tachycardia, hypertensive crisis, and risk of angina or heart attack. Always taper under doctor's supervision. In heart failure, only increase from 2.5mg to 5mg after 2 weeks of tolerating the lower dose. Take at the same time every morning.

Indication Starting Dose Maintenance Dose Maximum Dose
Hypertension 5mg once daily 5 – 10mg once daily 20mg daily
Angina pectoris 5mg once daily 5 – 10mg once daily 20mg daily
Chronic heart failure 2.5mg (Concor 2.5mg) → 5mg after 2 weeks Titrate slowly to 10mg 10mg daily
Arrhythmia / rate control 5mg once daily As directed by cardiologist As prescribed
Post-myocardial infarction 5mg once daily 5 – 10mg once daily As prescribed

Heart Failure Titration Note: Patients with chronic heart failure must always begin on Concor 2.5mg — never start directly on 5mg in heart failure. The 5mg dose is introduced only after 2 weeks of tolerating 2.5mg without decompensation, significant bradycardia, or hypotension. Further titration toward 7.5mg and 10mg follows the same principle — two-week intervals between each dose increase with clinical assessment at each step.

How to Take:

  1. Swallow the tablet whole with a full glass of water
  2. Take every morning at the same time — with or without food
  3. Do not crush or split unless specifically advised by your doctor
  4. Never stop suddenly — always discuss dose reduction or discontinuation with your doctor first
  5. If a dose is missed on the same day, take it as soon as remembered — if the next day has arrived, skip and continue normally; never double up

Active Ingredients

Ingredient Strength per Tablet Mechanism
Bisoprolol Fumarate 5mg Cardioselective beta-1 blocker — reduces heart rate, cardiac output, and blood pressure; blocks sympathetic cardiac overstimulation

Who Should NOT Take Concor 5mg?

Do not take Concor 5mg if you:

  • Have acute or decompensated heart failure requiring intravenous inotropic support
  • Have cardiogenic shock
  • Have second or third degree AV block without a functioning pacemaker
  • Have a resting heart rate below 60 beats per minute before starting
  • Have sick sinus syndrome without a pacemaker
  • Have severe peripheral arterial disease
  • Have severe bronchial asthma or severe COPD
  • Have untreated phaeochromocytoma
  • Are allergic to Bisoprolol Fumarate or any ingredient in this product
  • Are a heart failure patient who has not yet been stabilised on Concor 2.5mg — do not start directly at 5mg

Always consult your doctor before use if you:

  • Have mild to moderate asthma or COPD — use with caution; monitor respiratory symptoms
  • Have diabetes — Bisoprolol masks tachycardia warning of hypoglycaemia
  • Have peripheral vascular disease
  • Have psoriasis — beta-blockers can exacerbate skin lesions
  • Are pregnant or breastfeeding — specialist supervision required
  • Are scheduled for general anaesthesia — inform your anaesthetist

Side Effects

Common (mild):

  • Bradycardia — expected pharmacological effect; monitor heart rate regularly; report to doctor if below 55 beats per minute with symptoms
  • Fatigue or tiredness — particularly at initiation; usually improves over 2 to 4 weeks as the body adapts
  • Cold extremities — hands and feet may feel colder due to reduced peripheral circulation
  • Dizziness or lightheadedness — particularly on standing; rise slowly from sitting or lying positions
  • Mild nausea or gastrointestinal discomfort

Serious — Stop Use and Seek Emergency Medical Attention:

  • Severe bradycardia with symptoms — heart rate below 50 beats per minute with dizziness, near-fainting, or collapse (یہ طبی ہنگامی صورتحال ہے)
  • Acute heart failure decompensation — sudden worsening of breathlessness, ankle swelling, inability to lie flat — may indicate dose is too high
  • Bronchospasm — worsening wheeze or severe breathlessness in patients with airway disease
  • Rebound phenomena on abrupt withdrawal — severe hypertension, angina, or heart attack if stopped suddenly — never stop without medical supervision
  • Significant hypotension — severe dizziness, fainting, confusion
  • Severe allergic reaction — rash, swelling of face or throat, difficulty breathing (یہ طبی ہنگامی صورتحال ہے)

Drug Interactions

Medicine / Substance Possible Interaction
Other antihypertensives (ACE inhibitors, ARBs, diuretics) Additive blood pressure lowering — beneficial in combination therapy; monitor for excessive hypotension
Verapamil and Diltiazem (non-dihydropyridine CCBs) Dangerous combination — severe bradycardia and heart block risk — avoid
Amlodipine and Nifedipine (dihydropyridine CCBs) Generally safe for angina and hypertension — monitor heart rate and blood pressure
Antiarrhythmics (Amiodarone, Flecainide) Additive AV conduction slowing — bradycardia and heart block risk; close specialist monitoring
Digoxin Additive AV conduction slowing — monitor for excessive bradycardia
Clonidine Taper Bisoprolol first before stopping Clonidine — prevents rebound hypertension
NSAIDs (Ibuprofen, Naproxen, Diclofenac) Reduce antihypertensive effectiveness — avoid regular NSAID use
Insulin and oral antidiabetics Bisoprolol masks tachycardia hypoglycaemia warning — monitor blood glucose carefully
Rifampicin Accelerates Bisoprolol metabolism — may reduce plasma levels and effectiveness
Alcohol (شراب) Additive blood pressure lowering and dizziness — avoid excessive consumption

Storage Instructions

  • Store below 25°C in a cool, dry place
  • Protect from moisture and direct sunlight
  • Keep in original blister pack until use
  • Keep out of reach of children (بچوں کی پہنچ سے دور رکھیں)
  • Do not use after the expiry date on the pack or carton

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Concor 2.5mg and Concor 5mg — when does my doctor move me from one to the other?

Both contain Bisoprolol Fumarate and work identically — the difference is dose strength and the resulting intensity of beta-blockade. Concor 2.5mg is the initiation dose used specifically for heart failure patients and sensitive or elderly patients beginning beta-blocker therapy for the first time. Concor 5mg is the standard starting dose for hypertension and angina in most adults, and the first titration target for heart failure patients who have tolerated 2.5mg for two weeks without problems. For heart failure, the move from 2.5mg to 5mg is a clinically significant step that requires your doctor's assessment — it should never be self-initiated regardless of how well you feel on the lower dose.

My blood pressure is now normal on Concor 5mg — can I stop taking it?

No — normal blood pressure on Concor 5mg means the medication is working effectively, not that hypertension has resolved. Hypertension is a chronic condition that requires ongoing management in most patients. Stopping Bisoprolol when blood pressure is well controlled will cause blood pressure to rise again — and abrupt stopping specifically carries the additional danger of rebound tachycardia and hypertensive crisis. If your blood pressure has been consistently well controlled for a sustained period, your doctor may consider a planned gradual dose reduction — but this decision must be made by your doctor based on a complete assessment of your cardiovascular risk and current health status.

Can Concor 5mg be taken alongside Amlodipine for blood pressure?

Yes — Bisoprolol and Amlodipine (a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker) are a commonly prescribed and clinically well-established combination for both hypertension and angina. They work through complementary mechanisms — Bisoprolol reduces heart rate and cardiac output while Amlodipine relaxes peripheral blood vessel walls — together achieving greater blood pressure reduction than either drug alone. This combination is particularly effective for angina patients because Bisoprolol's heart rate reduction prevents the reflex tachycardia that Amlodipine can cause alone. The important distinction is that non-dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers — Verapamil and Diltiazem — must not be combined with Bisoprolol due to dangerous synergistic cardiac conduction slowing.

How will I know if Concor 5mg is causing my heart to slow too much?

Regular home blood pressure monitoring with a device that also displays heart rate is recommended for all patients on Bisoprolol. A resting heart rate consistently below 55 beats per minute — particularly if accompanied by symptoms of dizziness, unusual fatigue, breathlessness on mild exertion, or near-fainting — suggests the dose may be producing excessive bradycardia and should be reported to your doctor promptly. Asymptomatic mild bradycardia (55 to 60 beats per minute) without symptoms is generally not a concern and reflects the expected pharmacological effect of beta-blockade. Your doctor will specify the heart rate threshold below which you should contact them for dose review.

Is Concor 5mg safe during pregnancy?

Beta-blockers including Bisoprolol are sometimes prescribed during pregnancy for maternal hypertension, arrhythmias, or cardiac conditions where the cardiovascular risk of untreated disease outweighs the medication risk. However, Bisoprolol crosses the placenta and has been associated with intrauterine growth restriction, neonatal bradycardia, hypoglycaemia, and respiratory depression in newborns when used close to delivery. Any use of Bisoprolol during pregnancy requires specialist obstetric and cardiology supervision with careful monitoring of foetal growth and neonatal wellbeing. The decision to continue, adjust, or switch antihypertensive therapy during pregnancy must always be made by your specialist — never self-manage cardiac medication during pregnancy.


⚕️ Medical Disclaimer: This product description is for general informational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. Concor 5mg is a prescription cardiac medication — always use under the supervision of a qualified doctor or cardiologist. Never stop Bisoprolol suddenly — always taper under medical guidance. Heart failure patients must follow the prescribed slow titration schedule. Seek emergency medical attention for severe bradycardia, chest pain, or sudden worsening of breathlessness.


Prescription Required (Rx) | Never Stop Suddenly — Always Taper | Standard Dose for Hypertension & Angina | Heart Failure: Start on 2.5mg First | Take Every Morning at the Same Time

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