Home » Prescription Drugs 16 » TOBA Tobrex
Tobramycin kills bacteria that cause certain eye infections.Tobramycin comes as eyedrops and eye ointment. The eye drops usually are applied every 4-8 hours; the ointment usually is applied two to four times a day. Follow the directions on your prescription label carefully and ask your doctor or pharmacist to explain any part you do not understand. Use tobramycin exactly as directed. Do not use more or less of it or use it more often than prescribed by your doctor.To use the eyedrops follow these instructions: Wash your hands thoroughly with soap and water. Use a mirror or have someone else put the drops in your eye. Remove the protective cap. Make sure that the end of the dropper is not chipped cracked. Avoid touching the dropper tip against your eye or anything else. Hold the dropper tip down at all times to prevent drops from flowing back into the bottle and contaminating the remaining contents. Lie down or tilt your head back. Holding the bottle between your thumb and index finger place the dropper tip as near as possible to your eyelid without touching it. Brace the remaining fingers of that hand against your cheek or nose. With the index finger of your other hand pull the lower lid of the eye down to form a pocket. Drop the prescribed number of drops into the pocket made by the lower lid and the eye. Placing drops on the surface of the eyeball can cause stinging. Close your eye and press lightly against the lower lid with your finger for 2-3 minutes to keep the medication in the eye. Do not blink. Replace and tighten the cap right away. Do not wipe or rinse it off. Wipe off any excess liquid from your cheek with a clean tissue. Wash your hands again.
Buy TOBA Tobrex and other Prescription Drugs 16 products online
at Medstore.
Buy Online at Medstore - Click Here!

About TOBA Tobrex:
Product Type: Prescription Drugs 16
TOBA ( Tobrex GENERIC Tobramycin )
TOBA (Tobrex GENERIC Tobramycin)
Tobrex GENERIC Tobramycin
0.30%
Tobrex GENERIC Tobramycin TOBA

View more
Prescription Drugs 16
Previous Product Next Product
You do not need a prescription to buy our products as we work under the laws of the country we ship from. We do recommend you check with your local customs to see if it is okay to import these products.
Errors and Omissions. We are not responsible for any typographical errors or inaccuracies set forth in this website. The information, prices, and discounts set forth herein are subject to change without notice.
Product Fulfilment : The pharmacy / Fulfilment Centre cannot be held liable for the accuracy of the diagnosis, treatment or medication prescribed or the correct use of products supplied. It lies on the purchaser to use any products supplied under the guidance of a physician.
Product Quality. The Pharmacy / Fulfilment Centre is responsible for ensuring that the correct product, in the correct amount and the correct strength is supplied to the correct patient. Product liability lies solely with the manufacturer.
World Drug News. Government funding crisis in Swaziland disrupts supply of HIV/AIDS supplies. "An acute government funding crisis in Swaziland, Africa's last absolute monarchy, is disrupting supplies of HIV/AIDS drugs and hampering the fight against the virus in the country with the world's highest infection rate, Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said Friday," Reuters reports. "Stocks of testing kits and related chemicals were 'almost dry,' making it next-to-impossible to chart the progress of the 70,000 patients on therapy or more than 130,000 other people carrying the virus, the aid agency said," according to Reuters.
"With 26 percent of its adult population, or more than 200,000 people infected, Swaziland ranks as the most AIDS-affected country," Reuters writes (Cropley, (9/9). In related news, a new report from Swaziland's government "has found that more than half of [30,000 Swazis, mostly women, working] in Swaziland's garment industry are living with HIV, and officials are realizing that the once-hailed promise of manufacturing employment has become a financial and medical nightmare for tens of thousands of Swazi women," PlusNews reports (8/11).
This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
Glez Glucotrol
Gliben Daonil
Gliclazide Glyade
Glimax Amaryl
Glimy Amaryl
GLINATE Starlix
Glinil M Glucovance
GlucoBalance
Glucobay Precose
Glucophage Fortamet
Glucophage (Metformin)
Glucotrol (Glipizide SR)
Glucotrol XL Generic Glipizide
Glucovance Generic Glyburide
GLUMET Glucophage
Glynase Glucotrol
Glynase XL Glucotrol XL
Gonaphene Clomid
GRANICIP KYTRIL
Graniset Kytril
Grief & Pining Formula
Grisactin (Griseofulvin)
GRISOVIN Fulvicin


|