For most drugs, the labeling is the manufacturer's guarantee and not the actual expiration date. For liability reasons, manufacturers are required to put a date to which the following criteria are met: 1) the drug is still safe to take (i.e. no increased side effects than the original studies imply, no added or new side effects) 2) the drug is still retains 90% effectiveness as of the day it was made. Most drugs after the expiration date are returned to the manufacturer or distribution and many of them are actually repackaged with a new brand and new expiration date due to the actual expiratory data that the manufacturers have. Some drugs however do form toxic metabolites (i.e. tetracycline, opioids) or loses its effectiveness significantly (liquid formulations, opioids, nitroglycerin etc) that it is not recommended to use after the expiration date (1 or 2 days to a few weeks may still be good since they really can't go from effective to ineffective or non toxic to toxic over night). Pseudoephedrine has a very long shelf life unless continually exposed to oxidative process such as heat and air. So in its original packaging in the 'foil' pseudoephedrine should last a long time.
Medication should not be used after the expiration date printed on the label. After the expiration medicine can lose its potency which can be very dangerous.
Expired yeast can still be used for baking, brewing, and even as a nutritional supplement. While it may not be as effective for leavening bread, it can still add flavor and nutrients to recipes.
Expired yeast may still be used for baking, but it may not be as effective in leavening the dough. It's best to use fresh yeast for optimal results.
yes the coverage is effective even though the registration is expired.
No, expired rubbing alcohol may not be as effective for disinfecting surfaces. It is recommended to use fresh rubbing alcohol for optimal disinfection.
Enoxaparin isn't something you want to fool around with - if it's expired, get a new injection because it won't work effectively. That's what expired means.
Mostly just expired ones. Expired beauty products can often irritate skin if used and possibly not work the way they're supposed to, like lotion leaving the skin still feeling dry.
If it has expired you cannot use it.
No, you cannot fly with an expired ID.
It is never a good idea to trust the usefulness of an out of date medicine but for the most part medicines are still majorly effective after the expectation date for several years
It is never a good idea to trust the usefulness of an out of date medicine but for the most part medicines are still majorly effective after the expectation date for several years
no it is not .if you drive with a expired license you are breaking the law