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Generic Antabuse

Disulfiram 250mg

Order Antabuse uk

Active ingredient: Disulfiram

Category: Alcoholism

Generic Antabuse is used to treat chronic alcoholism. It interferes with the metabolism of alcohol resulting in unpleasant effects when alcohol is consumed.

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Product Information

Antabuse

Disulfiram tablet

What is this medicine?

DISULFIRAM can help patients with an alcohol abuse problem not to drink alcohol. When taken with alcohol, this medicine produces unpleasant effects. This medicine is part of a recovery program that includes medical supervision and counseling. It is not a cure.

What should I tell my health care provider before I take this medicine?

They need to know if you have any of the following conditions:

  • brain damage
  • diabetes
  • heart disease
  • kidney disease
  • liver disease
  • psychotic disease
  • recently exposure to alcohol or any product that contains alcohol
  • seizures
  • taking metronidazole or paraldehyde
  • under-active thyroid
  • an unusual or allergic reaction to disulfiram, pesticides or rubber products, other medicines, foods, dyes, or preservatives
  • pregnant or trying to get pregnant
  • breast-feeding

How should I use this medicine?

Take this medicine by mouth with a full glass of water. You must never take this medicine within 12 hours of taking any alcohol. The tablets can be crushed and mixed with liquid before taking. Take your medicine at regular intervals. Do not take your medicine more often than directed. Do not stop taking except on your doctor's advice.

Overdosage: If you think you have taken too much of this medicine contact a poison control center or emergency room at once.

NOTE: This medicine is only for you. Do not share this medicine with others.

What if I miss a dose?

If you miss a dose, take it as soon as you can. If it is almost time for your next dose, take only that dose. Do not take double or extra doses.

What may interact with this medicine?

Do not take this medicine with any of the following medications:

  • alcohol or any product that contains alcohol
  • amprenavir
  • cocaine
  • lopinavir; ritonavir
  • metronidazole
  • oral solutions of ritonavir or sertraline
  • paclitaxel
  • paraldehyde
  • tranylcypromine

This medicine may also interact with the following medications:

  • isoniazid
  • medicines that treat or prevent blood clots like warfarin
  • phenytoin

This list may not describe all possible interactions. Give your health care provider a list of all the medicines, herbs, non-prescription drugs, or dietary supplements you use. Also tell them if you smoke, drink alcohol, or use illegal drugs. Some items may interact with your medicine.

What should I watch for while using this medicine?

Visit your doctor or health care professional for regular checks on your progress.

Never take this medicine if you have been drinking alcohol. Make sure that family members or others in your household know about this medicine and what to do in an emergency. When this medicine is taken with even small amounts of alcohol, it will produce very unpleasant effects. You may get a throbbing headache, flushing, vomiting, weakness and chest pain. Breathing and heart problems, seizures and death can occur. This medicine can react with alcohol even 14 days after you take your last dose.

Never take products or use toiletries that contain alcohol. Always read labels carefully. Many cough syrups, liquid pain medications, tonics, mouthwashes, after shave lotions, colognes, liniments, vinegar's, and sauces contain alcohol.

Wear a medical identification bracelet or chain to say you are taking this medicine. Carry an identification card with your name, name and dose of medicine being used, and name and phone number of your doctor and/or person to contact in an emergency.

What side effects may I notice from this medicine?

Side effects that you should report to your doctor or health care professional as soon as possible:

  • allergic reactions like skin rash, itching or hives, swelling of the face, lips, or tongue
  • changes in vision
  • confusion, disorientation, irritability
  • dark urine
  • general ill feeling or flu-like symptoms
  • loss of appetite, nausea
  • loss of contact with reality
  • numbness, pain or tingling
  • right upper belly pain
  • unusually weak or tired
  • yellowing of the eyes or skin

Side effects that usually do not require medical attention (report to your doctor or health care professional if they continue or are bothersome):

  • change in sex drive or performance
  • dizziness
  • drowsy, tired
  • headache
  • metallic or garlic taste
  • nausea, vomiting

This list may not describe all possible side effects.

Where should I keep my medicine?

Keep out of the reach of children.

Store at room temperature between 20 and 25 degrees C (68 and 77 degrees F). Keep in a tight light resistant container. Throw away any unused medicine after the expiration date.

FAQ about ANTABUSE Medications:

Should I have a prescription to order from you?

Some products available in our pharmacy require a valid perscription. If the law of your country or territory requires you to obtain perscription for any of the products which you plan to purchase you will be asked by our customer support representative to send it after you complete the order.

I can purchase ANTABUSE with no prescription?

Yes, our online drugstore sell pharmacy without prescription, and you can buy online ANTABUSE with no doctor prescriptions.

You have a discount ANTABUSE?

Yes, online-medic.com gives you a discount of 5%, enter OM05RX on the payment page


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Binge drinking ‘increases risk’ of dementia

Below we quoted Dr Jane Marshall of London’s Maudsley Hospital as saying alcohol is more likely to help induce dementia in women than men because “women have more body water and less body fat” than men. It is the other way round; the ratio of water to fat is lower in the female than the male. Ethanol (alcohol) is distributed in water so for a given body weight its concentration in water (thus the blood stream) tends to be higher in the female than the male.

Heavy drinking may be to blame for one in four cases of dementia. Doctors have linked alcohol intake to the development of the brain-wasting condition in between 10 and 24% of the estimated 700,000 people in the UK with the disease.

They warn that binge drinking and increased consumption are likely to produce an epidemic of alcohol-related brain damage in the future, which could see drinkers starting to experience serious memory problems in their 40s.

Women who drink a lot are at much greater risk than men of suffering problems with their cognitive functions, because they are physiologically less well able to cope with alcohol’s effects.

Drink is known to kill brain cells, but the estimate of its impact on neurological health, contained in the journal Alcohol and Alcoholism, indicates that the problem may be much more widespread than previously thought.

The rise in the amounts that people drink means “it is therefore likely that prevalence rates of alcohol-related brain damage are currently underestimated and may rise in future generations”, say the authors.

Dr Jane Marshall, one of the co-authors and consultant psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital in south London, said: “People think that dementia is something that happens to people over 65. But a lot of those under 65 have got cognitive problems and a large proportion of the problems in that group are related to alcohol. Alcohol-related brain damage may account for 10-24% of all cases of all forms of dementia. We know that alcohol is associated with serious cognitive impairment. It reduces memory and general cognition,” she added.

These findings follow research in America last year indicating that consuming more than two drinks a day can bring forward the onset of Alzheimer’s by as much as 4.8 years. Two thirds of all the 700,000 people in the UK with dementia have Alzheimer’s.

“Drink is more likely to help induce dementia in women than men because women have more body water and less body fat, which means that they metabolise alcohol differently and so are more vulnerable,” said Marshall.

Women who drink the same as men have a higher risk of cognitive impairment for that reason, in the same way that they are at higher risk of getting alcohol-related liver disease.

However, a heavy drinker of either sex who abstains from alcohol can expect to see brain cells regenerate and improvements in key areas of brain activity.

Gayle Willis of the Alzheimer’s Society said: “We know that the prolonged use of alcohol can lead to memory deficiencies. Only one third of the people with Alzheimer’s are diagnosed, but the problem of under-diagnosis of people with alcohol-related memory impairment could be even greater.” But the society believes that only a handful of all cases of dementia, perhaps as few as 3%, are directly attributable to alcohol.

Marshall and her colleagues examined Korsakoff’s syndrome, a little-known form of dementia linked to alcohol intake, characterised by short-term memory loss, changes in behaviour and confusion. It is increasingly common in Scotland and the Netherlands, especially among poorer people with poor diets. One study of sufferers found that half were under 50.

Professor Ian Gilmore, president of the Royal College of Physicians, said: “It is really concerning that awareness among clinical staff of this important link between alcohol and dementia remains poor, yet detection of early signs often gives a real chance of successfully heading off the condition. It is vital that we improve understanding among doctors and nurses about the links between heavy drinkers and neurological damage. Equally important is that people understand that alcohol-related brain damage can strike at any time of life.”

Other research has shown that moderate drinking, of up to two drinks a day, can help protect against the onset of dementia.

Dr Allan Thomson, the guest editor of Alcohol and Alcoholism and spokesman for the Medical Council on Alcohol, has written to Dawn Primarolo, the public health minister, warning that the NHS must give alcohol-related brain damage the same priority it has put into liver problems linked to heavy drinking.

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