tvguy
Question anything the facts don't support.
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2003
- Messages
- 47,450
Yes, the dosage was identical.It is state law in many states for vets needing to have seen your pet within the last year to provide a prescription. There are many drugs used in veterinary medicine that are the same drugs as human medicine, just different dosing. For example tramadol (pain), gabapentin (pain), phenobarbital (seizures), zonisamide (seizures), steroids (numerous uses), Benadryl (allergies), insulin (diabetes), amoxicillin (infections), etc are all used in both human and veterinary medicine, just with very different dosing, which is why you can't just give your pill to your pet. If your vet is prescribing a medication used by humans too, it is worth seeing if the human pharmacy carries the correct dose for your pet and the cost for the medication compared to the vet office and having your vet write a prescription for you to fill at the human pharmacy.
On the human side, my mom was a nurse and it was her practice if her Doctor gave her a new prescription, she would ask if he had samples. I found that works with the vet too, especially with flea drugs. That way you can try a new product for free to see if there are any allergy issues of undesirable side effects.