URGENT: GET THIS NOW FOR SHTF!!! | |
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Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 1136725 United States 01/19/2011 09:04 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I dunno...are you confident fish grade antibiotics vs human antibiotics are safe and will do the job? Sorry, just asking. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 1209397watch the video...she recommends this site in the beginning. If you are still skeptical you can google it...i read many forums saying its fine... |
NevynShyne User ID: 1236208 United States 01/19/2011 09:11 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | ANTIBIOTICS!! Quoting: ºSPiRaLºA must have! I am not a doctor but from what I have studied Amoxicillin and Ciprofloxin seem to be good choices. PRESCRIBED FOR: Amoxicillin is used to treat infections due to organisms that are susceptible to the effects of amoxicillin. Common infections that amoxicillin is used for include infections of the middle ear, tonsils, throat, larynx (laryngitis), bronchi (bronchitis), lungs (pneumonia), urinary tract, and skin. It also is used to treat gonorrhea. PRESCRIBED FOR: Ciprofloxacin is used to treat infections of the skin, lungs, airways, bones, and joints caused by susceptible bacteria. Ciprofloxacin is also frequently used to treat urinary infections caused by bacteria such as E. coli. Ciprofloxacin is effective in treating infectious diarrheas caused by E. coli, Campylobacter jejuni, and Shigella bacteria. I have a selection of anti-biotics. I purchased them online from various sources, mostly from Mexico. A few observations: Pharma grade is plainly labeled on the bottles. Legitimate? I don't know. The manufacturers on the labels also make 'prescription' meds. Hmmmm.... They are labeled for aquarium usage but are capsules. Hmmm...Is that not a tad peculiar? Would a capsule be the most effective way to treat an aquarium or a fish? I think not. It is, however, an effective way for a human to take them. Just sayin. It's worth checking into. Recently the laws have changed in regards to fish meds, etc. Big pharma is catching on to us! You can not get them in big bottles anymore. They have to be in blister packs, which makes them more expensive. Get'em now before they are completely illegal. NevynShyne Find me & friend me on FB. /nevynshyne |
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ºSPiRaLº (OP) User ID: 1136725 United States 01/19/2011 09:58 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Anyone comment on Shelf / storage life of the meds? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 1197108In the OP I mentioned at least 5 years. (Cipro has been known to last for 9 years) Here are links: [link to www.ciprofloxacinpharmacy.com] [link to www.medicines.org.uk] |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 1236324 United States 01/19/2011 10:18 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | You can get these at Amazon, as well as others. They are pharma-grade. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 1236592Do it before the loophole closes. It would be fucked to survive TSHTF only to die sometime later from a septic infection due to a small cut because you didn't have any antibiotics. |
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Anonymous Coward (OP) User ID: 1136725 United States 01/20/2011 06:43 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The Medical Letter On Drugs and Therapeutics www.medicalletter.org Published by The Medical Letter, Inc. •1000 Main Street, New Rochelle, NY 10801 •A Nonprofit Publication Vol. 44 (W1142B) October 28, 2002 REPRODUCED FOR ONLINE USERS DRUGS PAST THEIR EXPIRATION DATE Physicians and pharmacists are often asked if patients can use drugs after their expiration date. Pharmaceutical companies, because of legal restrictions and liability concerns, will not sanction such use and may not even comment on the safety or effectiveness of using their products beyond the date on the label. THE EXPIRATION DATE — The expiration date on the manufacturer’s package is based on the stability of the drug in its original closed container. The date does not necessarily mean that the drug was found to be unstable after a longer period; it means only that real-time data or extrapolations from accelerated degradation studies indicate that the drug will still be stable at that date. The expiration date for new drugs is usually 2-3 years from the date of manufacture. Once the original container is opened for use or dispensing, the expiration date on the container no longer applies. Retail pharmacists who repackage drugs, in accordance with the standards of the US Pharmacopoeia (USP), label them with a "beyond-use" date, generally one year from the date the prescription is filled. SAFETY — The only report of human toxicity that may have been caused by chemical or physical degradation of a pharmaceutical product is renal tubular damage that was associated with use of degraded tetracycline (GW Frimpter et al, JAMA 1963; 184:111). Current tetracycline preparations have been reformulated with different fillers to minimize degradation and are unlikely to have this effect. STABILITY — Shelf life is the time a product, stored under reasonable conditions, is expected to remain stable (generally retain greater than 90% of potency) (B Kommanaboyina and CT Rhodes, Drug Dev Ind Pharm 1999; 25:857). Data from the Department of Defense/FDA Shelf Life Extension Program, which tests the stability of drug products past their expiration date, showed that 84% of 1,122 lots of 96 different drug products stored in military facilities in their unopened original containers would be expected to remain stable for an average of 57 months after their original expiration date (JS Taylor et al, 2002 FDA Science Forum Poster Abstract, Board AC-08, www.fda.gov, search "2002 FDA science forum"). Storage in high humidity may interfere with the dissolution characteristics of some oral formulations. In one published study, however, captopril (Capoten) tablets, flucloxacillin sodium (Flucloxin) capsules (a penicillin not available in the US), cefoxitin sodium (Mefoxin) powder for injection and theophylline (Theo-Dur) tablets stored under both ambient and "stress" (40C and 75% relative humidity) conditions remained chemically and physically stable for 1.5-9 years beyond their expiration dates (G Stark et al, Pharm J 1997; 258:637). Amantadine (Symmetrel) and rimantidine (Flumadine) remained stable after storage for 25 years under ambient conditions, and retained full antiviral activity after boiling and holding at 65-85C for several days (C Schol-tissek and RG Webster, Antiviral Res 1998; 38:213). In another report, theophylline retained 90% of potency for about 30 years (R Regenthal et al, Hum Exp Toxicol 2002; 21:343). LIQUID DRUGS — Drugs in liquid form (solutions and suspensions) are not as stable as solid dosage forms. Suspensions are especially susceptible to freezing. Drugs in solution, particularly injectables, that have become cloudy or discolored or show signs of precipitation should not be used. When oral drugs are in solution with dyes, however, color changes may be due to degradation of the dye and not the drug. Epinephrine in EpiPen injections loses potency after its expiration date; in one study, 5 of 7 autoinjectors contained less than 90% of the labeled epinephrine content 10 months after the expiration date, without necessarily being discolored or showing signs of precipitation (FER Simons et al, J Allergy Clin Immunol 2000; 105:1025). Drugs prepared by addition of a solvent before dispensing or administration (such as suspensions of antibiotics for oral use or lyophilized drugs in vials for parenteral use) tend to be relatively unstable in the liquid state. With ophthalmic drugs, the limiting factor may not be the stability of the drug, but the continued ability of the preservative to inhibit microbial growth. CONCLUSION — There are virtually no reports of toxicity from degradation products of outdated drugs. How much of their potency they retain varies with the drug and the storage conditions, especially humidity, but many drugs stored under reasonable conditions retain 90% of their potency for at least 5 years after the expiration date on the label, and sometimes much longer. Reply With Quote |
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