Tramadol is also known as Ultracet, (Tramadol with Acetaminophen), it’s the generic name for Ultram (tramadol/APAP). The “ultra” of ultracet is tramadol and the “cet” part of ultracet is used in many different household medications that may be in your medicine cabinet right now. Acetaminophen is the other combining drug that makes tramadol do it’s magic. You can find Acetaminophen in Tylenol or IB pro-phenol. Acetaminophen is used to help increase your tolerance to pain, in combination with tramadol its effects can work quite nicely. The two drugs work together “in synergy” to control pain. Smaller or mild pain signals won’t usually make it to the brain. Tramadol helps stop these pain sensors by stopping the message. The larger discrete pain signals do. Tramadol is used to stop these signals from reaching the brain so the pain seems to be invisible.
Tramadol is used for short-term use only. Not recommended for everyday use pass
the five day mark, because the risk of getting addicted to tramadol is greater
after five days. Unless appointed by a physician, you should only use Tramadol
for acute pain that will not go away, tramadol can, however, be very helpful in
many painful situations. Tramadol is used to treat pain. Use tramadol for pain
Physician studies have been done by government testing on patients between the
ages of 9 months to 80 years of age, with a group of 190 people. The affect of
tramadol will generate within 2 hours of taking tramadol orally and should
resolve symptoms within 24 hours. Tramadol should only be taken at a maximum of
100 mg per dose.
The percentages are determined by the trial of 190 patients, some took tramadol, some the placebo.
“Main symptoms from orally consuming the tramadol included central nervous system (CNS) depression (27.4%), nausea and vomiting (21.1%), tachycardia (17.4%), and seizures (13.7%). Dosage ranged from a taste amount to 5000 mg. The smallest amount of tramadol associated with seizure was 200 mg, and 84.6% of seizures occurred within 6 hours of time of ingestion. Logistic regression analysis showed an association between seizures and tramadol use in males, chronic use, suicide attempts, intentional abuse or misuse, and tachycardia (HR >100 beats/min). No effect was seen in 36.3% of patients, minor effects in 43.7%, moderate effects in 19.5%, and major effects in 0.5%.”
“Tramadol overdoses frequently cause CNS depression, nausea/vomiting,
tachycardia, and seizures. Symptoms from the tramadol generally resolve within
24 hours. Accidental ingestions of the tramadol in children were well tolerated,
primarily causing sedation.”
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