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  2. U-47700 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U-47700

    U-47700, also known as U4, pink heroin, pinky, and pink, is an opioid analgesic drug developed by a team at Upjohn in the 1970s [1] which has around 7.5 times the potency of morphine in animal models. [2] [3] [4] Physical Sample of U-47700 [5]

  3. Alprazolam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alprazolam

    Some of the more common terms are modified versions of the trade name "Xanax", such as Xannies (or Xanies) and the phonetic equivalent of Zannies; [131] [132] references to their drug classes, such as benzos or downers; or remark upon their shape or color (most commonly a straight, perforated tablet or an oval-shaped pill): bars, ladders ...

  4. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Williams'_Pink_Pills...

    In 1890, G. T. Fulford & Company purchased the rights to produce Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People for $53.01 after encountering a pill prescribed by a local physician, William Jackson, [3] and began marketing it through Dr. Williams Medicine Company. Reverend Enoch Hill of M.E. Church of Grand Junction in Iowa, endorsed the product in ...

  5. Boehringer's Pink Pill: It Ain't Viagra - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2010-06-19-female-viagra-fda...

    A panel of U.S. Food and Drug Administration experts decided Friday that Boehringer Ingelheim's so-called "female viagra" drug, flibanserin, doesn't provide enough benefit to outweigh the risks.

  6. Combined oral contraceptive pill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combined_oral...

    The pill was subsequently approved for use in June 1999, when Japan became the last UN member country to do so. [233] However, the pill has not become popular in Japan. [234] According to estimates, only 1.3 percent of 28 million Japanese females of childbearing age use the pill, compared with 15.6 percent in the United States.

  7. Tablet (pharmacy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tablet_(pharmacy)

    A caplet is a smooth, coated, oval-shaped medicinal tablet in the general shape of a capsule. Many caplets have an indentation running down the middle, so they may be split in half more easily. [5] Consumers have viewed capsules as the most effective way to take medication ever since they first appeared.

  8. PNU-99,194 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PNU-99,194

    PNU-99,194(A) (or U-99,194(A)) is a drug which acts as a moderately selective D 3 receptor antagonist with ~15-30-fold preference for D 3 over the D 2 subtype. [1] [2] [3] Though it has substantially greater preference for D 3 over D 2, the latter receptor does still play some role in its effects, as evidenced by the fact that PNU-99,194 weakly stimulates both prolactin secretion and striatal ...

  9. Capsule (pharmacy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capsule_(pharmacy)

    Capsules. In the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, encapsulation refers to a range of dosage forms—techniques used to enclose medicines—in a relatively stable shell known as a capsule, allowing them to, for example, be taken orally or be used as suppositories.