It is hard to answer. The best thing would be to ask your doctor or nurse. Have the Excedrin bottle with you so that the exact ingredients can be reviewed (there are different formulations.) If you are having headaches or body aches talk to your doctor so they can make sure they are taking the best care of you they can.
no
You should not take NSAIDs like ibuprofen, aspirin, excederin, etc while pregnant. Some may say just not to take it during the third trimester of pregnancy but I always ask patients "why risk it?". Take tylenol (acetaminophen) instead. -Pharmacist
45 milligrams
Take advice from your doctors.
it depends what type of cancer you have. the most common treatment is Chemotherapy.
My brother has chemotherapy.
my brother has chemotherapy
Chemotherapy is not a diagnosis. Chemotherapy is a treatment
Chemotherapy given by intramuscular injection is absorbed into the blood more slowly than IV chemotherapy. Because of this, the effects of IM chemotherapy may last longer than chemotherapy given intravenously.
Chemotherapy can be harmful to a fetus. Consult your doctor if you are on chemotherapy and suspect you might be pregnant.
No, not at all. It is a form of chemotherapy and immuno-suppressant.
Chemotherapy is usually given in cycles, and the amount of cycles and length of each depends on the type of cancer or disease the chemotherapy is being administered for. It can last anywhere from a one-time treatment to commonly one year. This time may increase as the diagnoses changes, disease progresses or the response to chemotherapy fluctuates. The physical administration of chemotherapy may not be very long at all. Taken orally and through direct injections it only lasts as long as the act while an IV drip may take a few hours.