Article: Cymbalta The Swiss Army Knife Of Drugs
Started by FiveNotions, Jun 27 2014 10:28 PM
7 replies to this topic
#3
Posted 28 June 2014 - 03:31 AM
Wagtail, did you read my response to your question over in this thread?
https://www.cymbalta...urn/#entry43713
How are you doing today? Did you call your therapist and your doc?
I will "hound you" on this, you know, until you do it! ;-)
Xoxo
https://www.cymbalta...urn/#entry43713
How are you doing today? Did you call your therapist and your doc?
I will "hound you" on this, you know, until you do it! ;-)
Xoxo
#6
Posted 06 July 2014 - 08:31 AM
BLG, good to hear from you, how are you feeling? Any progress with the cluster headaches?
If what you're referring to is the phrase "the Swiss Army Knife of drugs," it was coined by the author of the article, not Lilly .... the author intends it as a pejorative descriptor for the poison....
What I found interesting is that the article is from the Indianapolis Star newspaper...the hometown newspaper of Eli Lilly HQ ... I figured they'd have been "bought off" long ago by Lilly and thus be writing nothing but laudatory BS... :-)
If what you're referring to is the phrase "the Swiss Army Knife of drugs," it was coined by the author of the article, not Lilly .... the author intends it as a pejorative descriptor for the poison....
What I found interesting is that the article is from the Indianapolis Star newspaper...the hometown newspaper of Eli Lilly HQ ... I figured they'd have been "bought off" long ago by Lilly and thus be writing nothing but laudatory BS... :-)
#7
Posted 06 July 2014 - 10:06 AM
Hi BLD.
It's no different than the guy in the back alley slipping you the stuff behind the dumpster and saying, "This medicine will make you fly! It'll take away all your pain, your cares, and your fears-- it will make you beautiful!"
Same motive, same enterprise, same line, same shit-different day!
My former solve-all regimen of Irish Whiskey and cocaine is highly underrated. lol
#8
Posted 07 July 2014 - 02:02 AM
"All pain travels through the body and into the brain," said Dr. Michael Robinson, a Lilly psychiatrist and associate medical director of Cymbalta. "In order for someone to experience pain, it's perceived by the brain. Cymbalta is a medication that works in the brain and spinal cord. Based on its mechanism of action, it's effective in a number of disorders."
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