Clear Answers to Your Medication Questions So You Can Take Your Medicine Safely

The Gold Standard for Anti-Inflammatories

As I opened my bottle of over the counter pain reliever this morning, I noticed that I am almost out. Again.

This past week I have been having more muscle pain and stiffness than usual…a flare-up of a condition that has been dragging at me for the past 4 months.

As I shook out 2 round blue tablets, I sighed. “Louise,” I told myself, “it’s because you have been having to take 2 doses of 2 pills now every day, just to keep moving. You’re going to go through it faster.”

The 2 round blue tablets I take every day is also my top recommendation for when customers ask me what is best for muscle aches and inflammation. The good news is that this potent anti-inflammatory drug is available without a prescription, and is inexpensive.

Because this medicine is a powerful pain reliever. I recommend it for dental pain, pain from menstrual cramps, and general muscle swelling and pain.

But there is a catch.

The medication I take every morning and evening for my ongoing muscle swelling, pain and stiffness is naproxen. You may have heard it advertised by one of its brand names, Aleve®. Two tablets of 220mg each give you a dose of 440mg, twice a day. That is nearly up to the strength of the prescription version of 500mg.

This is one POWERFUL analgesic.

Whenever a new anti-inflammatory and pain reliever is being developed, it is compared to a standard. There is one drug in the pain and inflammation drug group that stands out, and is used as a benchmark for the other ones. This is considered “the gold standard” of effectiveness and potency.

Do you know what the “gold standard” for prescription drugs marketed for pain and inflammation is?

Naproxen at a dose of 500mg twice a day is the benchmark by which all of other similar drugs are measured against. Non-prescription Aleve® or naproxen, which is 220mg in each tablet or caplet, when taken at the full adult dose of two tablets every 12 hours, is nearly equivalent.

But like with so many medicines, this drug can also be dangerous. It and its close cousins are responsible for thousands of hospitalizations and even deaths.

There is more information about naproxen and tips on how to take medicines safely at www.askdrlouise.com/blog.

Warm Regards,

Dr. Louise

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  • ABOUT DR. LOUISE

    Dr. Achey graduated from Washington State University’s school of pharmacy in 1979, and completed her Doctor of Pharmacy from Idaho State University in 1994.

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