Oramorph SR 100 mg
Innopran XL
46
An M 515 pill, a peach/beige color, is Mirtazapine (Generic) AKA Remeron (Brand name) an antidepressant with anti-anxiety and sedative side effects.
This pill is Mononessa (birth control pill) and the green ones are the placebo pills. So basically it's a sugar pill with no medication.
Literally: 'under tongue' If you have to take a pill or some type of other medication (nitro perhaps) sublingually, you place it underneath your tongue and let it dissolve.
Drug! Pill! Shot! Injection!
No. It's an anti seizure medication
The automated pill dispenser is easy to use. The pills for each time of day are placed in special compartments. When it is time to take the pills, the exact amount of pills required is dispensed.
Weekly pill dispensers save confusion. If a great many pills need to be taken they are all placed in the pill dispenser on the relevant days. Each day the pill dispenser is opened at the relevant day of the week and the pills inside are consumed. This is especially useful if the medication has to be taken every 48 hours, as it is much easier to lose track as to when the medication was taken. It is also very useful for people who have large quantities of medication (and therefore lose track of it) or have short-term memory problems and consequently over- or under-dose.
Form of medication can refer to any medications you are currently taking. It can also mean are you taking a pill or liquid type of the medication.
To look up a pill, one will probably want a medication reference instead of a medical dictionary. While a medical dictionary lists medical conditions and medical names, a medication reference includes pill names and pictures to help one identify a specific medication.
There is a regiment when taking medication, follow it and there will not be a question of what to do. There are pill containers that will allow this.