Thursday, 27 April 2017

Buy Opana 30mg Online Legally



Opana:

  • OPANA® ER contains oxymorphone, a substance with a high potential for abuse similar to other opioids including fentanyl, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, methadone, morphine, oxycodone, and tapentadol. OPANA® ER can be abused and is subject to misuse, addiction, and criminal diversion.
  • All patients treated with opioids require careful monitoring for signs of abuse and addiction, since use of opioid analgesic products carries the risk of addiction, even under appropriate medical use.
  • OPANA® ER, like other opioids, can be diverted for non-medical use into illicit channels of distribution.
  • Careful record keeping of prescribing information, including quantity, frequency, and renewal requests as required by state law, is strongly advised. Proper assessment of the patient, proper prescribing practices, periodic re-evaluation of therapy, and proper dispensing and storage are appropriate measures that help to reduce abuse of opioid drugs.

Risks Specific to Abuse of OPANA

  • OPANA® ER is for oral use only. Abuse of OPANA® ER poses a risk of overdose and death. This risk is increased with concurrent abuse of OPANA® ER with alcohol and other substances. Taking cut, broken, chewed, crushed, or dissolved OPANA® ER enhances drug release and increases the risk of overdose and death.
  • With parenteral abuse, cases of thrombotic microangiopathy (a condition characterized clinically by thrombocytopenia and microangiopathic hemolytic anemia) have been reported; many cases resulted in hospitalization and treatment with plasmapheresis. Parenteral drug abuse is commonly associated with transmission of infectious diseases such as hepatitis and HIV.

Dependence


  • Both tolerance and physical dependence can develop during chronic opioid therapy.
  • Physical dependence results in withdrawal symptoms after abrupt discontinuation or a significant dosage reduction of a drug. Withdrawal also may be precipitated through the administration of drugs with opioid antagonist activity, (e.g., naloxone, nalmefene), mixed agonist/antagonist analgesics (e.g., pentazocine, butorphanol, nalbuphine), or partial agonists (e.g., buprenorphine). Physical dependence may not occur to a clinically significant degree until after several days to weeks of continued opioid usage.
  • OPANA® ER should not be abruptly discontinued. If OPANA® ER is abruptly discontinued in a physically dependent patient, a withdrawal syndrome may occur.
  • Infants born to mothers physically dependent on opioids will also be physically dependent and may exhibit respiratory difficulties and withdrawal signs.

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