Chemical name: Apomorphine Hydrochloride
[Uprima]. Medications should only be taken in accordance with the advice of your medical professional.
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More about Uprima :
CAUTIONS: Uprima should be used with caution in patients with: An abnormally formed penis (such as angulation, cavernosal fibrosis or Peyronie's Disease). Uncontrolled high blood pressure, low blood pressure. A history of postural hypotension. Compromised renal or hepatic function. Patients taking medication for high blood pressure, nitrate medications.
SIDE EFFECTS: The manufacturers have tested the drug on over 5,000 men during 21 clinical trials. When taken at the recommended doses some side effects have been reported although they were generally mild and transient. The most common side effects are nausea, headache and dizziness.
DO NOT TAKE THIS MEDICATION IF: If you're taking medicines containing nitrates you should not use this product. Nitrate medications help relieve chest pains in heart patients. When they are combined with Uprima they can cause your blood pressure to drop to dangerously low levels. HOW DOES UPRIMA WORK? Before taking Uprima it is advised to drink a small amount of water, this helps the tablet to dissolve. The tablet should then be placed under the tongue. In the majority of men the tablet will be completely dissolved within 10 minutes (if any residual amount remains in the mouth after 20 minutes It may be swallowed). If the tablet is swallowed immediately it will not be effective. The amount of time it takes Uprima to work varies from person to person, but on average it takes between 10 minutes to 20 minutes. Uprima dissolves under the tongue and is absorbed in the mouth, therefore the ability of the tablet to work and the time it takes to work is not affected by food/meals. Alcohol consumption can diminish sexual performance. Therefore in order to get the maximum benefit from the medication it is advisable not to drink large amounts of alcohol before taking Uprima.
2mg 1 tablet
3 mg 1 tablet
3 mg 4 tablets

For years, Americans living near Canada and Mexico have taken advantage of the low cost prescription drugs available across the border, allowing them to purchase brand name and generic medicines like Uprima at
substantial savings compare to prices in the United States. You must only take medications in accordance with the advice of your doctor or medical professional and you must only take prescription drugs if you are in possession of a valid prescription.
[Uprima]
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Drug interactions with over-the-counter
cough medicines : There are two general types of cough medicine that are available
over the counter. (There are also some types of cough medicines with significant
amounts of narcotics like codeine, but these stronger cough medicines are only
available by prescription.) Some over-the counter cough medicines are antitussives.
Dextromethorphan is one of the more common ingredients in antitussives. An antitussive
is a cough suppressant. It works by partially blocking the cough reflex. It
lessens your body's tendency to allow a cough to be triggered involuntarily.
Some common antitussive over-the-counter cough medicines include Triaminic Cold
and Cough, and Vicks 44 Cough and Cold.
The other type of over-the-counter cough medicine is an expectorant. The main
ingredient for over-the-counter expectorants is guaifenesin. Expectorants work
by thinning the mucus that can clog your airway and cause you to cough to clear
it. Some common expectorant over-the-counter cough medicines include Mucinex
and Robitussin Chest Congestion. With any medication, including fairly tame
over-the-counter medications, you always want to be aware of the risk of it
interacting adversely with some other medication - over-the-counter or prescription
- that you are taking. In the case of over-the-counter cough medicine, the primary
risk is consuming too much of an ingredient because you're not aware it's in
multiple medications you're taking. This happens most often because some products
are designed to treat multiple symptoms of, say, a cold. So you need to read
your labels and check the ingredients.
For instance, you may be taking something you think
of as a cough medicine, when in fact if you look closely you'll see that it
treats other symptoms as well. Then if you're also taking something else for
those other symptoms, you could be inadvertently doubling up. You might be taking,
say, an antihistamine, a decongestant, and/or a pain reliever, and if one or
more of these is also contained in your cough medicine, then you may exceed
the recommended dose. Or, your cough medicine may indeed be solely a cough medicine,
but you may be also taking a general cold remedy which itself contains cough
medicine, thus exceeding the recommended dosage in that way. Beyond that, there
is a small risk of an over-the-counter cough medicine interacting adversely
with certain prescription drugs. If you are on any prescription medications,
always ask your doctor before taking cough medicine, or any other medication.
Specifically, some patients taking a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI), a prescription
drug used to treat depression among other conditions, have had problematic interactions
with over-the-counter cough medicines.
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