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DRUGS & SUPPLEMENTS
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How often in a day do you take medicine? How many times? |
Kaolin:
Anti-Diarrheal Liquid
For Animal Use Only
Keep Out of Reach of Children
NET CONTENTS:
1 GALLON (3.785L)
ASPEN
VETERINARY RESOURCES, Ltd.
For oral administration as an aid in the treatment of noninfectious diarrhea in horses, cattle, dogs and cats.
Administer orally after first sign of diarrhea and after each loose bowel movement, or as needed.
Cattle and Horses: 6 to 10 fl oz
Calves and Foals: 3 to 4 fl oz
Dogs and Cats: 1 to 3 tablespoonfuls
If symptoms persist after using this product for 2 to 3 days, consult your veterinarian.
TAKE TIME OBSERVE LABEL DIRECTIONS
Kaolin ... 90 gr. (5.8 g)
Pectin ... 4 gr. (0.268 g)
In a palatable vehicle.
Flavorings and color added.
Store at controlled room temperature between 15º and 30ºC (59º - 86ºF).
Protect from freezing.
SHAKE WELL BEFORE USING.
Restriced Drug.
Use only as directed.
Not for human use.
Manufactured for:
Aspen Veterinary Resources, R Ltd.
Liberty, MO 64068
A316AP 12/11
Lot No. Exp. Date
Opium:
Pectin:
Drug Facts
Donnagel-PG Suspension (Pectin) 5.4 mg
Oral demulcent
For temporary relief of minor discomfort and protection of irritated areas in sore mouth and sore throat.
Sore throat warning: if sore throat is severe, persists for more than 2 days, is accompanied or followed by fever, headache, rash, swelling, nausea or vomiting, consult a doctor promptly. These may be serious.
- sore mouth does not improve in 7 days
- irritation, pain or redness persists or worsens
- adults and children 3 years of age and older: allow one pop to dissolve slowly in mouth
- May be repeated as needed or as directed by a doctor
- Children under 3 years of age: ask a doctor
Store at 20°-25°C (68°-77°F) in a dry place
caramel color, corn syrup, honey, natural flavor, sucrose, water
Mon.-Fri. 8 am to 8 pm EST
LittleRemedies.com
Depending on the reaction of the Donnagel-PG Suspension after taken, if you are feeling dizziness, drowsiness or any weakness as a reaction on your body, Then consider Donnagel-PG Suspension not safe to drive or operate heavy machine after consumption. Meaning that, do not drive or operate heavy duty machines after taking the capsule if the capsule has a strange reaction on your body like dizziness, drowsiness. As prescribed by a pharmacist, it is dangerous to take alcohol while taking medicines as it exposed patients to drowsiness and health risk. Please take note of such effect most especially when taking Primosa capsule. It's advisable to consult your doctor on time for a proper recommendation and medical consultations.
Is Donnagel-PG Suspension addictive or habit forming?Medicines are not designed with the mind of creating an addiction or abuse on the health of the users. Addictive Medicine is categorically called Controlled substances by the government. For instance, Schedule H or X in India and schedule II-V in the US are controlled substances.
Please consult the medicine instruction manual on how to use and ensure it is not a controlled substance.In conclusion, self medication is a killer to your health. Consult your doctor for a proper prescription, recommendation, and guidiance.
Visitors | % | ||
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3 times in a day | 1 | 100.0% |
Visitors | % | ||
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6-10mg | 1 | 100.0% |
Visitors | % | ||
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> 60 | 1 | 100.0% |
I agree with this, the best for cramps, if i did not have that around in the 80's i would be in the emergency room. | |
I stumbled on this listing while researching various medications for food poisoning. I was curious if any active information on Donnagel-PG still existed. Back when I was a kid in the late 70's-80's, you could buy Donnagel- PG (the suspension liquid), AND the Donnagel caplets (same absorbent agent but no Opium) over the counter at - basically - any drug store you walked into. I remember being sick with stomach flu, sick with having eaten something that didn't sit well with me, food poisoning, and all kinds of general nausea, with and without diarrhea, INCLUDING nausea and vomiting from various physical ailments (basically every kind of nausea-diarrhea-vomiting combo other than that caused by pregnancy or hangovers since I was too young for either of those when it got yanked off the market, so I never took Donnagel to treat those two particular issues). For me, and my family, Donnagel was HANDS-DOWN the BEST "upset stomach" medication in the world. WORLDS better than Phenergan, Emetrol, Pepto, Kao, Dramamine, Alka-Seltzer, Immodium, Zofran, etc. I imagine it would've even worked particularly well for cancer-treatment-related bouts of nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. It helped with cramps, with running to the bathroom, with "going" every time you drank some water or ate so much as a bite of food, with that gut-wrenching sort of nausea that's so bad and "ughhy" it makes you entirely unable to appreciate a single, solitary THING about your life until it passes, and PARTICULARLY, it worked with that horrible feeling that your stomach had turned itself inside out, and that you'd left the lining of your intestines in the toilet bowl this last time that you'd visited. It soothed the lining, stopped the cramps, slowed the system (but not so much that it hindered being able to use it for food-poisoning, in which "passing" the rancid food and frothingly-fetid bacteria out as soon as humanly possible is the ideal), and quelled the nausea - even that which was so severe it made one dizzy, sweaty, pallid, shaky, and weak. I MISS IT SO MUCH. People with chronic intestinal issues here in the US are very, VERY limited as to what we can access - both OTC and from doctors/drug companies. Numerous drugs that have been used safely for DECADES in Canada, are turned away here at the border since the pharmaceutical corps haven't yet figured out a way to turn a significant enough profit with their manufacture (citing "concerns" over the accuracy and reliability of the "non-urban countries" where they were developed - as if CANADA were some third-world country with no doctors, education, or even power or running water...and look at OUR alternative - the "FDA" - what a JOKE). Or, in the case of Donnagel, the FDA's squabbles have merged with the DEA's. It's well-known and medically accepted that the amounts of Opium in this medication are SO LOW as to be insignificant, and that it is administered in such a way (suspension liquid to be digested as a tiny percentage of the overall dose vs. condensing it, heating it, and jamming it up into your veins with a hypodermic needle) - as to be utterly inapplicable to the human body on a systemic level. In other words, although it will act on the stomach lining with which it comes into direct contact, relaxing the smooth-muscle, calming the tissues, and slowing excretion; it will NOT make it through the bloodstream in concentrations significant enough to even MILDLY affect neuro-motor skills, MUCH LESS get you high. You could drink the whole bottle and not "feel" the narcotic in any way. In order to feel "drugged" or "high" when taking this med, you'd probably have to consume SO MUCH that you'd die of Kaolin toxicity twice-over before even coming close. And yet, the FDA, et.al. have worked tirelessly to get this "dangerous narcotic" off the shelves. I just wish you could still but it here. Particularly on a night like tonight, when I've been suffering for a week with food poisoning from under-cooked pork - because I've been TOO SICK to drive to the hospital. Overall, Donnagel-PG - when I had access to it - worked BETTER than any other nausea-vomiting-diarrhea-stomachache-queasy-stomach*flu-food*poisoning- motion*sickness combo on the planet. Unfortunately for me, then, whenever some OTC med works really, really well, it always gets yanked off the market so some giant pharmaceutical corporation can tweak some tiny little insignificant portion of the overall chemical make-up of the drug, like altering one of the inactive ingredients to make it taste better, or to supposedly help it stay "fresher" longer, and then they can throw a patent on it and charge out the yazoo for it for SEVEN LONG YEARS (including forcing people to have to go see a doctor just to GET the darn prescription in the first place ~ a whole rotten, vicious cycle of 'one hand washes the other here' mentality). And even after those early premium prices plummet with generics, you still have the fat-cat health-care industry propping itself up by appropriating medications people SHOULD be able to get OTC, and making them maintain insurance~so they can see a doctor~who can prescribe the medicine~where they can take it to the pharmacy~and AFFORD to pay the price (be it label or generic) for it, just to simply GET WELL. America viewing health- care as a BUSINESS rather than an absolute RIGHT of our "free society" (like the right to bear as many guns as we can carry AND THEN SOME) - pretty much keeps us in the dark ages over here. |
The information was verified by Dr. Rachana Salvi, MD Pharmacology