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  2. Chloramphenicol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chloramphenicol

    Chloramphenicol may cause bone marrow suppression during treatment; this is a direct toxic effect of the drug on human mitochondria. [23] This effect manifests first as a fall in hemoglobin levels, which occurs quite predictably once a cumulative dose of 20 g has been given. The anaemia is fully reversible once the drug is stopped and does not ...

  3. Average Cost of Pet Insurance in 2024 For Cats & Dogs - AOL

    www.aol.com/average-cost-pet-insurance-2024...

    Your dog accidentally ingests chocolate and needs emergency treatment costing $2,000. Without insurance, you'd pay the full $2,000. With insurance, here's how it breaks down:

  4. Cheaper across the border: Why Americans are heading to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/cheaper-border-why-americans-heading...

    A 2022 Forbes Advisor survey of 2,000 dog and cat owners found nearly two-thirds say inflation has made it more difficult to pay a surprise vet bill. Bills less than $1,000 would cause 42% of pet ...

  5. List of antibiotics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_antibiotics

    Chloramphenicol(Bs) Chloromycetin: Meningitis, MRSA, topical use, or for low-cost internal treatment. Historic: typhus, cholera. Gram-negative, Gram-positive, anaerobes: Rarely: aplastic anemia. Inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by binding to the 50S subunit of the ribosome Fosfomycin: Monurol, Monuril

  6. Alternative veterinary medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_veterinary...

    Alternative veterinary medicine is the use of alternative medicine in the treatment of animals. Types alternative therapies used for veterinary treatments may include, but are not limited to, acupuncture, herbal medicine, homeopathy, ethnomedicine and chiropractic. The term includes many treatments that do not have enough evidence to support ...

  7. Flea treatments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flea_treatments

    Diatomaceous earth can also be used as a home flea treatment in lieu of acetylcholinesterase inhibitory treatments or insecticides which carry with them a risk of poisoning for both humans and other animals. However, diatomaceous earth dust is harmful to pets and people when inhaled, requiring use of a dust mask to apply.

  8. Equianalgesic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equianalgesic

    Some patients request to be switched to a different narcotic due to stigma associated with a particular drug (e.g. a patient refusing methadone due to its association with opioid addiction treatment). [4] Equianalgesic charts are also used when calculating an equivalent dosage of the same drug, but with a different route of administration.

  9. Drug of last resort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_of_last_resort

    The use of a drug of last resort may be based on agreement among members of a patient's care network, including physicians and healthcare professionals across multiple specialties, or on a patient's desire to pursue a particular course of treatment and a practitioner's willingness to administer that course.