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Non-RX Medicines
Eazol
Ibuprofen / Motrin
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Tramaden
 
Prescription Medicines
Allopurinol
Butalbital
Colchicine
Esgic Plus
Fioricet (Butalbital)
Flextra
Imitrex
Tramadol
Ultram (Tramadol)
Zyloprim (Allopurinol)
 

Ultram ® (Tramadol) has been prescribed in more than 55 million patients worldwide and Ultram has been prescribed in more than 21 million patients in the United States.

Order Tramaden : Natural Pain Relief for safe, non-prescription pain management

Ultram ®


Product Dosage Qty Consult Price Order
  Generic Ultram 50 mg 30 Tabs FREE
  Generic Ultram 50 mg 90 Tabs FREE
  Generic Ultram 50 mg 180 Tabs FREE
  Ultram 50 mg 30 Tabs FREE
  Ultram 50 mg 60 Tabs FREE
  Ultram 50 mg 90 Tabs FREE



Ultram ®

How to take this medication
Follow the directions for using this medicine provided by your doctor. Store this medicine at room temperature, away from heat and light. If you miss a dose of this medicine, take it as soon as possible. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the missed dose and go back to your regular dosing schedule. Do not take 2 doses at once.

Side Effects
Side effects, which may go away during treatment, include dizziness, nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth, constipation, headache, or sweating. If they continue or are bothersome, check with your doctor. Check with your doctor as soon as possible if you experience skin rash, itching, seizures, or hallucinations. If you notice other effects not listed above, contact your doctor, nurse, or pharmacist.

Precautions
Do not exceed the recommended dose or take this medicine for longer than prescribed. If you experience difficulty breathing or tightness of chest; swelling of eyelids, face, or lips; or develop a rash or hives, tell your doctor immediately. Do not take any more of this medicine unless your doctor tells you to do so. Avoid alcohol while you are using this medicine. This medicine will add to the effects of alcohol and other depressants. Do not drive, operate machinery, or do anything else that could be dangerous until you know how you react to this medicine. Using this medicine alone, with other medicines, or with alcohol may lessen your ability to drive or to perform other potentially dangerous tasks. Before you begin taking any new medicine, either prescription or over-the-counter, check with your doctor or pharmacist. For women: if you plan on becoming pregnant, discuss with your doctor the benefits and risks of using this medicine during pregnancy. This medicine is excreted in breast milk. Do not breast-feed while taking this medicine.

Drug Interactions
Inform your doctor about all the medicines you take with and without a prescription.

Missed Dose
If you miss a dose, skip the missed dose and resume your usual dosing schedule. Do not "double-up" the amount used to catch up.

Storage
Store at room temperature away from sunlight. Keep this and all medications out of the reach of children.

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Chronic Pain : Chronic pain is a progressive disease state of the nervous system caused by the overloading of the body's natural pain control systems. The disease is accompanied by changes in the chemical and anatomical makeup of the spinal cord. Chronic pain is a malignancy. When it goes untreated it increases in intensity and spreads to areas of the body previously unaffected, damaging the sufferer's health and functioning. Doctors ignore your chronic pain for reasons that have nothing to do with the seriousness of your condition. Untreated chronic pain will damage your health and cause you to develop multiple health problems. Inactivity due to ongoing pain will lead to increased incidence of hypertension, heart disease, breathing disorders, cancer, and diabetes. If the disease is untreated in its most serious form, untreated chronic pain leads to suicide.

Chronic pain treatment : One of the most serious problems in modern medicine is the undertreatment of patients in chronic pain. More than 30 million patients suffer from chronic pain, and seven million of them cannot relieve their pain without opioids (narcotics), but only few doctors in the country are willing to prescribe them, according to the National Chronic Pain Outreach Association. Today's massive denial of pain medication is a consequence of the social, regulatory and law enforcement climate created by the War on Drugs. Doctors can suffer loss of license or even incarceration, when the inevitable mistake of providing medicine to a dishonest patient who may be misusing or diverting medication occurs. The climate has led to a situation in which most physicians are incorrectly trained in pain management and under- or non-treatment of pain is the norm. Doctors who treat pain correctly typically must exceed the usual prescribed dosages, and in so doing draw the scrutiny of state medical boards and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). The DEA demands that doctors and pharmacies regularly provide them with records of every prescription for controlled substances that is written or filled. The fate of pain patients in the "police state of medicine" is grim. Day after day of constant torment drives many to depression or even suicide. Many patients receive enough medicine to provide relief for four hours out of the day, and have to decide which 20 hours of the day they will spend in extreme pain. Frightened doctors sometimes "fire" patients, cutting them off from pain meds suddenly, thereby putting them at risk for shock or withdrawal. And those patients receiving adequate prescriptions live in fear that their doctors could be put out of business by the government or frightened into cutting them off. Former addicts as well as former prisoners are in the worst situation of all, being automatically suspect -- but pain patients from these backgrounds need and deserve proper treatment nonetheless.

 

 

 

 

 

19th November 2008
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