If you take the medication as prescibed, it's not known to be harmful to your liver. It is a medicine recommended for persons with reduced liver function, actually.
yes you can take it instead of or with they use methadone to treat pain and or withdrawals for oxycodone
It is bad for using drugs because if you do drugs then your kidneys and your liver will turn black and that will hurt he heart and you will eventually have a heartattack.
I don't know what methadone your taking but Methadone usually comes in clear or a pinkish, purple color. At some clinics, they mix juice in with the clear methadone. If you are taking a colored methadone, it is likely either juice from the clinic, or a sugar mixture for flavoring because methadone is very bad tasting. Methadone will taste bad even with strong juice mixed in.
It depens of your actual methadone dose and age (or other factors). Generally, you should avoid this combinaison and use another antibiotic. However, if "cipro" is the only choice, make sure you check every parameters with your doctor and pharmacist.
Methadone does not is not bad. What you may think sucks, is that Methadone is given in place of other drugs, so you can break the drug habit. Try the methadone, and see how much better you will feel, once you kick the drug habit and then you will be able to say that ''drugs suck''.
no
Yes! I had a very bad reaction from levaquin and methadone. It will put you into withdraw.
Endocrine
Technically, your liver has no nerve cells, so cannot hurt. However there is a protective sheath around the liver which does contain nerve cells - if this becomes "stretched" or something from your liver enlarging due to liver disease, this does hurt. This is what is usually referred to as "liver pain". Also, some people experience "referred liver pain" in their left shoulder (there's a nerve from your liver to your left shoulder).
Only if you consume alcohol.Alcohol can cause liver and brain damage.
yes methadone builds up in the liver and can be very harmful when taken with alcohol.
no