A time released morphine capsure will be released over a long period of time. This means it would be about the same as taking 1 mg every 45 minutes or so over a day(rough estimate). If you need a drug as strong as morphine to control your pain, time release would be a good option as you can have long lasting pain control without sufferering as much from side effects (dizziness, nausea) that you would get from taking a large dose of MS IR.
Chronic bronchitis can be serious in any animal including humans.
The violation of human rights
*Malignant* - severe , critical and chronic.
This depends on which pain medication you are alternating with. Alternating with another opiate (morphine, hydrocodone, codeine, etc..) will not reduce your tolerance to Percocet because opiates possess a cross-tolerance with each other. Substituting an over the counter NSAID such as ibuprofen for Percocet will slowly reduce your opiate tolerance but the dosage of NSAID needed to even come close to the pain relieving effects of Percocet would have serious detrimental effects on your liver and stomach. The best and safest way to reduce your Percocet tolerance is to slowly reduce your dosage and space dosages out.
It may be a serious problem. You really need to see a doctor and talk with her about it.
Diabetes Mellitus
In all but the poorest countries chronic diseases are the most serious health problem in poor countries.
No, but over time it could develop into a more serious condition, if it becomes chronic.
The Tagalog adjective "talamák" can mean chronic, rampant, serious, addicted, or infused.
No, acute is "right now" - it's the opposite of chronic. The definition you provided is for chronic. Acute = sudden and it can get serious very quickly.
personality disorder
Neurosarcoidosis is a slowly chronic disease with a progressive course, which is fatal in about 50% of patients.