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02-12-2006, 06:06 PM #1
OPSenior Member
CODEINE
Okay so i have two tablets here. The bottle says:
APAP/CODEINE TAB 300/30M
GENERIC FOR TYLENOL/COD
There are actually two different tablets (???)
one says:
93
150
and on the other side: 3
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the other one says:
BMS
6060
and the other side: 500
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so, any advice on which one to take, etc, etc would be good.
thankssilasbotwin Reviewed by silasbotwin on . CODEINE Okay so i have two tablets here. The bottle says: APAP/CODEINE TAB 300/30M GENERIC FOR TYLENOL/COD There are actually two different tablets (???) one says: 93 150 Rating: 5
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02-12-2006, 06:07 PM #2
OPSenior Member
CODEINE
the two different tablets are in the same bottle. they are white.
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02-12-2006, 06:26 PM #3
OPSenior Member
CODEINE
please?
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02-12-2006, 06:29 PM #4
OPSenior Member
CODEINE
btw i plan on chewing it up and swallowing. is one 30M tab gonna be good?
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02-12-2006, 07:18 PM #5
OPSenior Member
CODEINE
okay seriously i need to know if i should chew, right now.
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02-12-2006, 07:52 PM #6
Senior Member
CODEINE
The first tablet you mention is Tylenol with Codeine, the one marked BMS 6060 is Metformin which is apparently for treating type 2 diabetes.
Codeine is a weak opiate, you may experience a buzz, lightheadedness or brightening but most people don't get significant effects from low doses of it. Don't even bother with the second pill, as I mentioned it is just for diabetes.
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02-12-2006, 08:08 PM #7
Senior Member
CODEINE
Maybe you (threadstarter) should give back whoever diabetes pills those are. They need those for, uh, survival.
Originally Posted by Nullific
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02-12-2006, 08:28 PM #8
OPSenior Member
CODEINE
shit. i took both. is this bad???????
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02-12-2006, 08:35 PM #9
Senior Member
CODEINE
Did you not read this post:
Originally Posted by silasbotwin
It will do next to jack shit, so you're okay.
Originally Posted by Nullific
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02-12-2006, 08:49 PM #10
Senior Member
CODEINE
It could be, especially if you:
· have kidney disease;
· have liver disease;
· have congestive heart failure;
· have acute or chronic metabolic acidosis, including diabetic ketoacidosis;
· have had a heart attack or a stroke;
· have a serious infection, illness, or injury;
· need to have surgery;
· need to have x-rays or other procedures using injectable contrast agents;
· are dehydrated (have lost water from your body) due to diarrhea, vomiting, fever, heat stroke, decreased fluid intake, or any other cause;
· drink alcohol; or
· are 80 years of age or older and have not had your kidney function tested
The biggest problem I see with it, though, is that you don't seem to have type 2 diabetes and just took a drug used to treat it. This is a problem because the metformin doesn't know that you don't have type 2 diabetes and will do what it's designers intended it to do anyways. That is reduce the amount of glucose produced and absorbed by your body and stimulate the insulin in your body. You'll probably be fine, but i'm no medical doctor.








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