Re: What is the shelf life of antiboitics?
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Robozebra</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: spotswood</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I prescribe rx's every day all day long. I can tell you what I travel with all the time.
First if it is in the wilderness, I have a field surgical kit which I have carried since 5th SFGA days in the early 70's. It has a small assortment of hemostats, would probes, kelly clams.
For expendables in it, I have numerous 25 guage long needles and syringes with carbocaine anasthetic, (No epinephrine). That way you can use it for any wounds. Then I have numerous packs of needles and suture (ethicon with a f2S cutting needle). These you can use to suture yourself closed. Then the usual alcohol wipes and telfa bandages, and ace wraps and some tape. Maybe a few tampons too.
For antibiotics, I always have Cipro, Zithromax, Keflex, Augmentin, Duricef. These will cover any strain you have to deal with. The most difficult part is determining what you are treating.
For pain meds I keep Vicodin ES, and Percocet and plenty of Ibuprofin.
Another handy item to have in your kit would be a Sanford pocket guide to antibiotics and diseases and symptoms.
The antibiotics will last for years after the expiration date. I tend to use them periodically so I find that they are never more than two years past the date I replenished them. </div></div>
This maybe the worst advice in a thread that a physician could ever give. Numerous mistakes... Besides spelling mistakes, Ethicon is a name for a company, not a type of suture. If someone was going to repair a wound in the field, a braided suture (silk, Ticron, Ethibond, etc...) would be a better choice, and it would be much easier to use a straight needle if you aren't comfortable with suturing techniques. A long 25 gauge needle to inject local anesthetic isn't a good choice either. A 25 gauge needle will be difficult to use for the injection and a long needle used to inject Carbocaine by someone not trained to use this medication could lead to intravenous injection, which could be rapidly fatal. Recommending someone acquires that list of antibiotics and uses them is really strange. That list has multiple overlaps in coverage and could lead to dangerous interactions, and possible drug resistance. The pain medication recommendations are even more alarming for a health professional. How about Motrin/Advil, before recommending restricted narcotics? Why not just recommend Fentanyl lollipops?
CWJ
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Intravenous local anesthetic is not rapidly fatal, unless you inject a ton of it.