Talk:Lofexidine: Difference between revisions
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==Lofexidine Website== |
==Lofexidine Website== |
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The website for this drug is located at http://www.lofexidine.co.uk . I may try expanding this article, but it will be my first edit aside from talk pages. I don't really know the ins and outs of wikipedia at all yet, so it'd be much better if someone else did it. The website doesn't have all that much information, but it's definitely got a lot more then wikipedia does. [[User:Tainted42|Tainted42]] 06:31, 9 October 2007 (UTC) |
The website for this drug is located at http://www.lofexidine.co.uk . I may try expanding this article, but it will be my first edit aside from talk pages. I don't really know the ins and outs of wikipedia at all yet, so it'd be much better if someone else did it. The website doesn't have all that much information, but it's definitely got a lot more then wikipedia does. [[User:Tainted42|Tainted42]] 06:31, 9 October 2007 (UTC) |
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==Clinically Equivalent?== |
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From what I understand, lofexidine is not clinically equivalent to methadone as purported and the fact that one is commonly used at higher doses than the other is completely meaningless unless were going to discuss the pharmacological mechanism by which they both eliminate the some of the same symptoms (certain withdrawal symptoms). They're not equivalent because methadone provides a whole set of effects that lofexidine does not and they're not even clinically equivalent with regards to withdrawal symptom relief because lofex. does not allievate all the symptoms nor does it provide complete relief. I would simply say that it is a useful aid for mitigating some of the unwanted effects of opioid withdrawal due to its antagonism of alpha-2 andrenergic receptors. -Zach |
Revision as of 02:36, 18 August 2008
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Lofexidine Website
The website for this drug is located at http://www.lofexidine.co.uk . I may try expanding this article, but it will be my first edit aside from talk pages. I don't really know the ins and outs of wikipedia at all yet, so it'd be much better if someone else did it. The website doesn't have all that much information, but it's definitely got a lot more then wikipedia does. Tainted42 06:31, 9 October 2007 (UTC)
Clinically Equivalent?
From what I understand, lofexidine is not clinically equivalent to methadone as purported and the fact that one is commonly used at higher doses than the other is completely meaningless unless were going to discuss the pharmacological mechanism by which they both eliminate the some of the same symptoms (certain withdrawal symptoms). They're not equivalent because methadone provides a whole set of effects that lofexidine does not and they're not even clinically equivalent with regards to withdrawal symptom relief because lofex. does not allievate all the symptoms nor does it provide complete relief. I would simply say that it is a useful aid for mitigating some of the unwanted effects of opioid withdrawal due to its antagonism of alpha-2 andrenergic receptors. -Zach