Generic Prilosec (Omeprazole, Prilosec® equivalent)
Omeprazole decreases the amount of acid produced in the stomach. Omeprazole is used to treat ulcers, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD or heartburn), and other conditions involving excessive stomach acid production. Omeprazole may also be used for purposes other than those listed in this medication guide.
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20mg
| Quantity | Price | Price per pill | Returning customer price | Bonus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | $ 47.00 | $ 4.70 | $ 42.00 | ---- | Add to cart |
| 20 | $ 53.00 | $ 2.65 | $ 47.00 | ---- | Add to cart |
| 30 | $ 60.00 | $ 2.00 | $ 54.00 | ---- | Add to cart |
Drug Medical Information
FIGHTING THE FREE-RADICAL FOE POWER UP WITH VITAMINS: BACK TO THE FUTURE
If you've been hearing a lot about herbs of late, it's because they're enjoying a renaissance in response to the 'back to nature' movement that's sweeping the health conscious. Are we reinventing the wheel? Yes and no.
It should come as no surprise that roots, seeds and leaves have the power to heal. Back at the dawn of time, the Chinese drank ginger tea for indigestion, which centuries later evolved into a British ginger-based stomach soother, which turned into today's ginger ale which modern American doctors still prescribe for mild stomach upsets.
Among the many remedies taken over by Western medicine from the ancient Chinese are rhubarb, castor oil, kaolin, camphor, and ginseng. Long before Hippocrates, primitive physicians knew about making vegetables into drugs. Derived from medicinal plants, many of these substances eventually found their way into western pharmacies, thanks to modern scientific methods.
America's medicine chests are crammed with drugs with herbal roots: aspirin, Sudafed, Metamucil. Despite the fact that a large percentage of U.S. prescription medications are still derived from plants, the average citizen seems more receptive to herbal remedies than the average doctor. No doubt a large segment of the population has lost faith with chemical drugs. They are properly fearful of side effects, and avidly seeking more natural alternatives.
Given the public's appetite for harmless ingredients, and their aversion to unsafe substances, we can appreciate the rapidly growing popularity of a 'new' - really 'old' - herbal formula that appears to be just what the public has been seeking. While writing this book several nutritionally-oriented doctors we'd been in touch with over the years, called our attention to a potassium-rich liquid, Km by name - (a 60 year old formula produced by Matol, Inc. of Canada). He recommended it as a reliable natural means of satisfying mineral requirements and 'upping' energy levels. A closer study of the ingredients that make up this unique botanical formula, suggests it provides much, much more.
According to the product literature, Km is concocted from 14 herbs: chamomile flower, saw palmetto berry, cascara sagrada, angelica root, thyme, passion flower, gentian root, licorice root, horehound root, senega root, celery seed, sarsaparilla root, alfalfa and dandelion root.
Check any recently published herbal guide, as we did, and you'll discover that the herbs mentioned are rich in the antioxidant Vitamins A, C and E; in the nerve-regulating B-complex nutrients; they're abundant sources of the essential minerals, calcium, magnesium, manganese and potassium, in iron, other trace minerals and indispensable oils as well as unidentified plant byproducts. All of which seems to add up to Km being the closest simulation yet to the "oral chelate" so many have been seeking for so long a time.
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