Q.
What is the best anti rejection drug to take?
Asked by narendra sharma,
13 Dec '12 05:06 pm
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Answers (4)
1.
THERE IS NO ONE specific medication to take for anti-rejection, as in an organ transplant..Your physician needs to weigh all the factors, then pick the medication he/she feels is appropriate. Before I was involved with caring for someone with cancer, I thought CHEMOTHERAPY was a specific drug given to cancer patients. What I learned was, chemotherapy is actually a combination of different anti-cancer drugs mixed together, depending on the type of cancer and different factors. There are at least 50 if not more combinations of drugs, mixed like a "cocktail", to give someone with cancer. For every type and severity of cancer, there is a different "cocktail". If you or someone you know is on an anti-rejection medication, don't be afraid to question the physician and also do some research.
Answered by iqbal seth, 13 Dec '12 05:12 pm
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2.
THERE IS NO ONE specific medication to take for anti-rejection, as in an organ transplant..Your physician needs to weigh all the factors, then pick the medication he/she feels is appropriate. Before I was involved with caring for someone with cancer, I thought CHEMOTHERAPY was a specific drug given to cancer patients.
Answered by vijay shukla, 20 Dec '12 03:48 pm
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3.
THERE IS NO ONE specific medication to take for anti-rejection, as in an organ transplant..Your physician needs to weigh all the factors, then pick the medication he/she feels is appropriate. Before I was involved with caring for someone with cancer, I thought CHEMOTHERAPY was a specific drug given to cancer patients. What I learned was, chemotherapy is actually a combination of different anti-cancer drugs mixed together, depending on the type of cancer and different factors. There are at least 50 if not more combinations of drugs, mixed like a "cocktail", to give someone with cancer. For every type and severity of cancer, there is a different "cocktail". If you or someone you know is on an anti-rejection medication, don't be afraid to question the physician and also do some research.
Answered by points, 18 Dec '12 12:26 pm
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4.
THERE IS NO ONE specific medication to take for anti-rejection, as in an organ transplant..Your physician needs to weigh all the factors, then pick the medication he/she feels is appropriate
Answered by Quest, 13 Dec '12 08:09 pm
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