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Scott C.
Gottlieb
Injury Law Attorney
29 Riverside Drive
Binghamton, NY 13905
Phone: 607-724-7700
Fax: 607-724-5370 |
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Glossary of Prescription Drug Terms
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Click on the first letter of the word from the list above to
go to the appropriate section of the glossary. Contact us if you would like a
personal injury law glossary or one of other legal glossaries for your website.
Legal Glossaries Main Page
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Occupational Disease: An illness resulting from
long-term employment in a particular type of work,
such as those employees exposed to asbestos, whom
later developed cancer.
Opinion: An explanation written by the judge
explaining his decision.
Original Jurisdiction: The first court to which a
legal dispute is referred.
Ortho Evra: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
announced on November 11, 2005 that the Ortho Evra
contraceptive patch exposes millions of women who
use the patch to levels of estrogen far higher than
most daily birth control pills, putting them at
higher risk for blood clots than previously
disclosed. The FDA also approved updated labeling
for the Ortho Evra contraceptive patch to warn
healthcare providers and patients about the
increased risk. The warning from Johnson and Johnson
subsidiary Ortho McNeil, makers of Ortho Evra patch,
states that the patch exposes women to 60 percent
more estrogen than daily birth control pills, which
contain 35 micrograms. Ortho Evra is the first and
only skin patch approved for birth control, and more
than 4 million women have used the patch since it
came on the market three years ago. The patch
releases ethinyl estradiol, and estrogen hormone,
and norelgestromin, a progestin hormone, through the
skin into the bloodstream. It only needs to be
changed once a week. The Associated Press in July
reported that, according to FDA records it obtained
through a Freedom of Information Act, women using
Ortho Evra in 2004 were three times as likely as
women using birth control pills to die or develop
nonfatal blood clots. The Associated Press learned
that of the 23 cases in which death was the outcome,
doctors reviewing the cases found 17 that appeared
to be blood-clot-related, including 12 in 2004.
Since the FDA estimates that it receives reports of
only between 1 percent and 10 percent of the serious
adverse drug reactions that actually occur, the
death rate for Ortho Evra may be significantly
higher. The Ortho-Evra patch, which is available by
prescription only, has not yet been pulled off the
market. The drug maker says it is launching its own
study with input from the FDA to assess the dangers
of using the patch. Women who may be using Ortho
Evra should contact their physician if any of the
following warning signals develop:
- Sharp chest pain, coughing of blood, or sudden
shortness of breath (indicating a possible clot in
the lung)
- Pain in the calf (indicating a possible clot in
the leg)
- Crushing chest pain or tightness in the chest
(indicating a possible heart attack)
- Sudden severe headache or vomiting, dizziness or
fainting, disturbances of vision or speech,
weakness, or numbness in an arm or leg (indicating a
possible stroke)
- Sudden partial or complete loss of vision
(indicating a possible clot in the eye)
- Breast lumps (indicating possible breast cancer or
fibrocystic disease of the breast; ask your doctor
or health care professional to show you how to
examine your breasts)
- Severe pain or tenderness in the stomach area
(indicating a possibly ruptured liver tumor)
- Severe problems with sleeping, weakness, lack of
energy, fatigue, or change in mood (possibly
indicating severe depression)
- Jaundice or a yellowing of the skin or eyeballs
accompanied frequently by fever, fatigue, loss of
appetite, dark colored urine, or light colored bowel
movements (indicating possible liver problems)
Overrule: In a trial, to overrule means to reject an
objection.
Oxycodone Hydrochloride: This drug is categorized as
an agonist opioid, a powerful group of analgesics
that work by blocking signals to pain receptors in
the brain. A synthetic narcotic derived from
opium-producing poppy plants, oxycodone HCL has
properties similar to morphine and is classified as
a Schedule II drug, which means that it can be
legally prescribed but has a high potential for
abuse. Oxycodone HCL is also an active ingredient in
Percocet, Percodan, and Tylox.
Oxycontin: Oxycontin most recently made headlines
when radio announcer Rush Limbaugh admitted his
addiction to the powerful, heroin-like painkiller in
2003. The opiate, which is highly addictive for both
legitimate and illegitimate users, is covered by
most insurance plans, thereby making it
significantly cheaper than illegal drugs; so cheap,
in fact, that Oxycontin has been nicknamed
“hillbilly heroin” and “poor man's heroin” on the
street. Oxycontin, which many consider to be a
defective drug, is also heavily marketed by its
manufacturer, Purdue Pharma. Its accessibility,
affordability, and extremely addictiveness make
Oxycontin inherently dangerous. It has been
associated with more than 100 deaths, most of which
involve mixing the drug with alcohol. Critics blame
Purdue Pharma for these tragedies, claiming that the
corporation failed to sufficiently warn doctors and
patients of 1) how addictive Oxycontin truly is and
2) that mixing it with alcohol could be so deadly. A
powerful prescription pain reliever prescribed for
patients suffering from moderate to severe chronic
pain. Oxycontin tablets contain anywhere from
10-160mg of oxycodone hydrochloride, an agonist
opioid that blocks signals to pain receptors in the
brain. Oxycontin pills are manufactured with a
controlled release mechanism that extends pain
relief for up to twelve hours.
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