And just how does a rash kill you? Are they talking about what happened to Kathy's Mom?
Basically, yeah.
Because calling that a rash is like calling Batman grumpy.
Heh. "Fatal rash" is easier for the majority of consumers to understand, plus it fits better on drug labels than "all of your skin may blister and separate from your body."
Huh--I was just googling SJS, and on the home page of the SJS Support foundation they have a note about a study that's going to try and find a gene for a risk of severe hypersensitivity to medication, specifically Lamictal. I wonder if that's an NSAID and if the study might be something I could participate in. I'd love to find out if I inherited Mom's allergy.
specifically Lamictal. I wonder if that's an NSAID
It's an anti-epileptic drug (sometimes used for other things, but not in the NSAID class).
OK then, maybe not.
Maybe they'll find the gene someday and I can get tested for it.
Both my parents had the bad luck to take drugs that were later discontinued due to causing heart attacks. Dad and Mom both took Vioxx and Mom took Fen Fen—which worked beautifully, peeling 100 pounds off her. I'm sure it made it much easier for the paramedics to get her into the ambulance.
On the other hand, Dad took a number of blood pressure, blood thinning, and anti-seizure meds later on that probably helped keep him alive the last 10 or so years of his life. And Mom's quality of life would have been drastically reduced without the thyroxin.
My mother's on coumadin - I was taking care of her for a while after she went on it (this was about a year after the near-fatal car crash, the atrial fibrillation, and the nearly bleeding to death from a burst varicose vein and ending up with a pacemaker). Got the dietary instructions and got to play food police. With my mom. Good times.
My current scary(est) medication has a rare but possible side effect of seizures, brain damage, and death.
Timelies all!
Had a medical thing that took part of the day(well, not the actual procedure, but the sedation and waking-up part) so I took the whole day off. No bad drug reactions here.
It's an anti-epileptic drug (sometimes used for other things, but not in the NSAID class).
Also bi-polar drug, which so many anti-convulsants are and vice verse.
Also bi-polar drug, which so many anti-convulsants are and vice verse.
That totally fascinates me. The brain just blows me away.
so a manager and one of his workers are having an argument in his office....which we ALL can hear.
We are having to eliminate positions and there are 2 employees who have had arguments like this in the last month, I am not sure why we are not just getting rid of the employees that are clearly unhappy with their positions.