Absolutely over the counter meds can kill anyone in a high enough dose.
Over the counter meds are usually meds that don't require doctor supervision and obviously non-narcotic. Prescribed meds require doctor supervision.
one or more mood stabilizers:LithiumDepakote (or other valproate)LamictalTegretolTrileptalNeurontinTopamaxcertain antipsychoticssometimes an antidepressant, antianxiety, or other meds as symptoms occur.
An antianxiety is any agent which serves to reduce anxiety.
I'm currently on antianxiety pills, but I have been around people who have gotten off of them a lot. I would suggest going to your doctor and what they are going to do it lower the dose and then keep lowering it until you are off, and warning NEVER EVER stop cold turkey you could end up worse than you started.
no
you cant. its antianxiety meds. there is no way to get high on this medication. Thats why head shrinkers prescribe it rather than xanax . so it wont be abused, but cures the actual problem. its supposed to. but it dont work for me.
Patients in bed take a single dose of medicine. They do not take a whole bottle. The meds are placed in small containers, frequently cups, for each patient. The meds (medications) nurse comes around with the meds cart and gives each patient his or her appropriate meds at the appropriate time of day. If the medicine were left in a big bottle in the room, some confused patients might take the entire bottle. In one case, the meds nurse left the meds on the bed table and another patient walked into the room and took the drugs. That was a mess! The meds nurse must watch to see that the appropriate patient takes the right drugs!
Intuniv is packaged as a time-released medication. That means the tablet must be intact, or the entire 24 hours worth of meds will dissolve very quickly -- you'll get a large dose of the meds right away, followed by 23 hours of no meds. As with all time-released meds, you should not cut, chew, or crush an Intuniv tablet.
These meds should not be taken together unless prescribed by a physician. And yes, they will interact.
overdoseunderdose
Antipsychotic and antianxiety agents. Several drugs given for anxiety and mental illness are known to cause specific defects