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This medication is one of the few drugs that is approved by the FDA of America and the UK Department of health.
If you have any doubts please read the current statement below from the FDA or feel free to visit their website for info here
Buy from us the antibiotic as recommended by the CDC America on treatment for Gonorrhea
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Please note you only have to buy the minimum purchase of 30 X 100mg to be effective |
We can now supply direct the only medicines recommended by both the Amercian CDC and the UK health service. Cefixime is the chemical name of the product, but it is often called by other names, depending on the location it is purchased from.
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Latest from CDC America on treatment for Clap / Gonorrhea
Release Date: April 16, 2007; Valid April 16, 2008
Updated recommended treatment regimens for gonorrhea infection are as follows:
For uncomplicated gonococcal infections of the cervix, urethra, and rectum, recommended treatments are 125 mg of ceftriaxone in a single intramuscular (IM) dose or 400 mg of cefixime (not available in the United States) in a single oral dose, plus treatment of Chlamydia if chlamydial infection is not ruled out. Although 400-mg tablets of cefixime are not available in the United States, you can still buy the equivalent from us.
Dr. Douglas said that the CDC has approached the Food and Drug Administration regarding this, and they are hopeful that oral tablets will soon be an option in the United States.
"While we only have this single class of recommended antibiotics, the cephalosporins, and the vigilance we've talked about today is a key public health priority, we've been using this class of drugs for the treatment of gonorrhea since the early 1980s, and fortunately, so far, there has not been any documentation of emergence of resistance," Dr. Douglas says. "I don't want to present an injectable antibiotic as an insurmountable obstacle, because we used it for years with penicillin; it's more of a bump in the road in terms of how providers will be caring for patients with gonorrhea."
Alternative regimens for uncomplicated gonococcal infections of the cervix, urethra, and rectum are 2 g of spectinomycin (not available in the United States) in a single IM dose or cephalosporin single-dose regimens (ceftizoxime, 500 mg IM; or cefoxitin, 2 g IM, administered with probenecid, 1 g orally; or cefotaxime, 500 mg IM).
For uncomplicated gonococcal infections of the pharynx, recommended regimens are 125 mg of ceftriaxone in a single IM dose, plus treatment of Chlamydia if chlamydial infection is not ruled out. There are currently no recommended alternatives for pharyngeal infection.
For disseminated gonococcal infection, pelvic inflammatory disease, epididymitis, and treatment of gonorrheal infections in patients with documented severe allergic reactions to penicillins or cephalosporins, updated treatment regimens are available at http://www.cdc.gov/std/treatment.