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This medication is a mineral supplement used to prevent or treat low amounts of potassium in the blood. A normal level of potassium in the blood is important so that your cells nerves heart muscles and kidneys work properly. Normal blood levels of potassium are usually achieved by eating a well-balanced diet. However certain situations cause your body to lose potassium faster than you can replace it from your diet. These situations include treatment with certain "water pills" (diuretics) a poor diet or certain medical conditions (e.g. severe diarrhea especially with vomiting).Indications:Treatment of potassium deficiency (particularly hypochloremic or hypokalemic alkalosis) associated with diuretic and steroid therapy vomiting and diarrhoea ulcerative colitis steatorrhoea diabetes insipidus and uncontrolled diabetes mellitus ileostomy or colostomy patients cirrhosis and dietary insufficiency.Dosage and Administration:1 tablet in half a glass full of water per day is normally sufficient to correct potassium and chloride deficiencies. In more severe depletion up to 4 tablets (56 mmol potassium and 32 mmol chloride) can be taken daily in divided doses in water.
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About Chlorvescent B:
Product Type: Prescription Drugs 4
Chlorvescent B/CRRNT (Generic Potassium Chloride )
Chlorvescent B/CRRNT (Generic Potassium Chloride)
Generic Potassium Chloride
548mg/298mg 60 Tablets 120(2 x 60) Tablets
Generic Potassium Chloride Chlorvescent B/CRRNT

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Education on antibiotic prescribing in Quebec worked. Guidelines for Quebec doctors on proper antibiotic use led to a decline in these prescriptions in the province, while prescribing rose in other provinces, a new study suggests.
The guidelines were published and disseminated to Quebec doctors and pharmacists in January 2005 due to worries about the overuse of antibiotics and partly as a response to an outbreak of Clostridium difficile infections.
Antibiotic consumption per capita was already 23.3 per cent higher in Canada generally than in Quebec in 2004, the study showed.
But in the year that followed publication of the guidelines, the number of outpatient antibiotic prescriptions in Quebec decreased 4.2 per cent, the study said, while increasing 6.5 per cent in other Canadian provinces. The trend persisted three years later.


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