Preguntas frecuentes sobre Tri-Estarylla
How much does Tri-Estarylla cost without insurance?
Tri-Estarylla costs $50.27 for uninsured customers. With a SingleCare Tri-Estarylla coupon, you could pay $5.93 for 1, 1 package (28 tablets), 0.18-35/0.215-35/0.25-35mg-mcg disp pack of Tri-Estarylla.
How much does Tri-Estarylla cost with insurance?
Your out-of-pocket expense for a Tri-Estarylla prescription will depend on your health insurance plan. A SingleCare Tri-Estarylla coupon may save you more money than using insurance – with SingleCare, Tri-Estarylla only costs $5.93. Your pharmacist can compare your SingleCare Tri-Estarylla price with your insurance copay to help you get the best savings.
Does Medicare cover Tri-Estarylla and how much does it cost?
Tri-Estarylla is usually not covered for Medicare-eligible patients under Medicare Advantage and Medicare Part D. Patients with Medicare can save money with a SingleCare Tri-Estarylla coupon. Tri-Estarylla costs $5.93 per 1, 1 package (28 tablets), 0.18-35/0.215-35/0.25-35mg-mcg disp pack with a SingleCare discount card accepted at participating pharmacies, such as CVS, Target, Walgreens, and many others.
What is the brand name of Tri-Estarylla?
Tri-Estarylla is a generic alternative to Ortho Tri-Cyclen, a women's birth control pill with ethinyl estradiol and norgestimate as the active ingredients. Other generic versions of Ortho Tri-Cyclen include Tri Sprintec, Tri-Femynor, Tri-Linyah, and Tri-Previfem. Search for these and other alternatives to Tri-Estarylla on our website or app to find additional information or savings coupons.
What is Tri-Estarylla?
Tri-Estarylla is a generic women's prescription birth control pill in a triphasic format, that is, the hormone dose changes each week for the first three weeks of the 28-day pill cycle.
The active ingredients in Tri-Estarylla are two hormones that regulate a woman's monthly fertility cycle: an estrogen (ethinyl estradiol) and a progestin (norgestimate). Birth control pills regularize these hormone levels to prevent the monthly release of an egg from the ovaries (ovulation) and make changes to the tissue lining the cervix to both prevent implantation of a fertilized egg and impede the movement of sperm through the reproductive tract.
Tri-Estarylla is taken daily in a 28-day sequence to match the body's natural fertility cycle. The final 7 tablets, however, are inert and taken at the end of the monthly cycle. These are meant as “reminder” pills to keep the patient on track for the next cycle of pills.
What are the side effects of Tri-Estarylla?
Common side effects of Tri-Estarylla include but are not limited to swelling, bloating, nausea, vomiting, stomach cramps, headache, breast tenderness, menstrual changes, vaginal itching, and vaginal discharge. Mood changes are common and include mood swings, depression, and decreased sex drive. Allergic reactions to Tri-Estarylla are extremely rare but include rashes and hives. drive. These allergic reactions are often due to the inactive ingredients in Tri-Estarylla.
Nursing mothers should avoid Tri-Estarylla because estrogens reduce breast milk production. Estrogens also pass into the milk and affect the development of the infant. Nursing mothers requiring birth control are often prescribed “mini-pills,” whose only active ingredient is a progestin.