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Yes but the B12 is a different compound. Phama uses methylcobalamin but horsey B12 is cyanocobalamin.

Either way I didn't use up the amps, lol.
The form has never mattered to me personally. Both work well so I just go for what is cheaper. However, I did notice amazon doesn't make it as easy to find as it used to be. You have to be specific in what you type.
 
Crazy question but are there some meds that help with sleep besides zopiclone, eszopiclone, tizinidine, seems like there is 1 that starts with the letter C but can’t think of it, any help?
 
Crazy question but are there some meds that help with sleep besides zopiclone, eszopiclone, tizinidine, seems like there is 1 that starts with the letter C but can’t think of it, any help?
Agomelatine, Tasimelteon, Ramemelteon -> Agomelatine is a anti-depressant that also works on the MT1 and MT2 pathways that melatonin works on. The other two work on the MT1 and MT2 to different degrees.

Trazadone, Hydroxyzine, Pregabalin, Gabapentin
 
Agomelatine, Tasimelteon, Ramemelteon -> Agomelatine is a anti-depressant that also works on the MT1 and MT2 pathways that melatonin works on. The other two work on the MT1 and MT2 to different degrees.

Trazadone, Hydroxyzine, Pregabalin, Gabapentin
Agomelatine requires liver monitoring.
 
Agomelatine requires liver monitoring.
Yes it does.

I would hope anyone buying a black market drug would make several searches relating to the drug prior to using it. Reading a list of drugs from some random dude on the internet and just taking them without research would be silly.
 
Yes it does.

I would hope anyone buying a black market drug would make several searches relating to the drug prior to using it. Reading a list of drugs from some random dude on the internet and just taking them without research would be silly.
You'd be surprised. The reason why medications are in blister packs is because people used to dump a handful of pills out and swallow them.
 
You'd be surprised. The reason why medications are in blister packs is because people used to dump a handful of pills out and swallow them.
Only my foreign meds are in blister packs - all my US meds are in bottles.

And I've been reliably informed that Americans are stupid.

Put those two together and we should be dropping like flies.
 
Only my foreign meds are in blister packs - all my US meds are in bottles.

And I've been reliably informed that Americans are stupid.

Put those two together and we should be dropping like flies.
Off topic, but the impression I get is that US pharmacies generally strip tablets & capsules out of their original factory packaging (eg blisters) & put them in those so-called pop-top containers when fulfilling prescriptions.

Is that correct?

FYI it’s SOP for pharmacies in the UK to leave tablets & capsules in original blisters, which literally all come in.
 
No. They come in bigger bottles and the pharmacists dispense into smaller bottles based upon the rx.

"Pharmacies can buy medications in huge, cost-effective bulk bottles (often 500–1,000+ pills)."


"Blister packs are used in the US for some cases, like birth control, short-course antibiotics (e.g., Z-packs), or medications sensitive to moisture/light, but they represent only about 20% of prescriptions."
 
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No. They come in bigger bottles and the pharmacists dispense into smaller bottles based upon the rx.

"Pharmacies can buy medications in huge, cost-effective bulk bottles (often 500–1,000+ pills)."


"Blister packs are used in the US for some cases, like birth control, short-course antibiotics (e.g., Z-packs), or medications sensitive to moisture/light, but they represent only about 20% of prescriptions."
I've never seen any other country doing bottles instead of original packaging
 
I've never seen any other country doing bottles instead of original packaging
In the US, bottles ARE the original packaging. Big, bottles are ordered by the pharmacy. They repackage into smaller bottles at the custom number of pills as the rx is written.
 
The USA is almost 100% bottle. Those amber/orange bottles are what almost all prescriptions are dispensed in. Been that way as long as I can remember.
My US pharmacy isotretinoin comes in the original blister packs (along with an absurd amount of packaging). But isotretinoin seems to be more strictly controlled than opiates or anything else I've received from a pharmacy.
 
isotretinoin is prone to degradation from exposure to light, oxygen, heat, and to some extent moisture, which can lead to isomerization (e.g., converting to tretinoin/all-trans retinoic acid) or other breakdown products that reduce potency and effectiveness.
This is the primary reasons isotretinoin capsules are almost always packaged in blister packs
 
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