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Youtube up Patriot Nurse. She has a vid on that subject and says what antibiotics can be used for. What to take and when, and if I remember correctly, when NOT to take them.
FYI a bottle of each broad spectrum (as suggested by The Patriot Nurse) is what I recommend, as well. I've also used them, personally, with no ill effects.
Amoxicillin
Ampicillin
Doxycycline
Ciprofloxacin
FYI, they appear to be increasingly more difficulty to find online as I've tried to link the ones I've previously purchased from Amazon.
I know it, I am more of the mindset of, in a pinch if antibiotics are not readily accessible, if one runs the risk of dying from septicemia and the only way to stave off death is the use of antibiotics and fish antibiotics are the ONLY thing available...Guys, this is a bit risky territory to get into if you dont know what you are doing.
Different infections are caused by different types of bacteria and require different types of antibiotics to treat. They also have side effects and risks associated with them. Plus they have specific doses to be bactericidal and fish doses are certainly going to be different than human doses.
Also, because of the overuse of antibiotics, there is a very good chance that basic antibiotics are not going to work. Unless a patient has strep throat or syphilis, I dont ever prescribe plain penicillin anymore (ampicillin, amoxicillin, penicillin, etc). The resistances are so high these are now basically useless.
I routinely have patients with bladder infections where the bacteria is resistant to 9 out of the 13 available antibiotics. Most of traditionally used antibiotics dont work anymore.
Most skin infections require antibiotics that cover MRSA (the resistant staph). Sometime like 30% of the time these will be resistant as well. Traditional antibiotics used for skin infections from cuts and scrapes dont work anymore.
Another risk of using antibiotics is getting a secondary infection like C Diff (clostridium difficile) colon infection. We are seeing more of these complications. You take the wrong antibiotics for a cough and you end up dying of severe diarrhea because C Diff is only treatable by 2 specific antibiotics and one you will hardly ever find even in the pharmacies (oral vancomycin).
So my warning here is YOU MAY DO MORE HARM to yourself or your family using fish antibiotics in emergency situations.
Oh, come on man.So my warning here is YOU MAY DO MORE HARM to yourself or your family using fish antibiotics in emergency situations.
Ive been buying them for years. I keep them around for emergencies and such and have never had to use them but its nice knowing they are around if I do need them.
FWIW many , if not all, of the fish antibiotics are just repackaged pharma grade antibiotics.
I know it, I am more of the mindset of, in a pinch if antibiotics are not readily accessible, if one runs the risk of dying from septicemia and the only way to stave off death is the use of antibiotics and fish antibiotics are the ONLY thing available...
Can you give me an example? I'm curious to how they are packaged and dosed and if they even come close to a therapeutic human dose
On several of the pill types they are identical to what the pharmacies will give you down to the markings on the pill and numbering. The "Fish Cycline" is a good example. Ive been prescribed Tetracycline before for a UTI and found the pills to be 100% identical to the fish cycline pills I picked up off ebay for $10 a bottle.
Unfortunately they do not market "Fish Morphine" .
On several of the pill types they are identical to what the pharmacies will give you down to the markings on the pill and numbering. The "Fish Cycline" is a good example. Ive been prescribed Tetracycline before for a UTI and found the pills to be 100% identical to the fish cycline pills I picked up off ebay for $10 a bottle.
Unfortunately they do not market "Fish Morphine" .