🔥 Your Heartburn's Worst Enemy!
Esomeprazole Magnesium USP 20mg Delayed Release Capsules are a powerful acid reducer designed to treat frequent heartburn. Each capsule contains 20mg of esomeprazole magnesium, providing effective relief for those experiencing heartburn two or more days a week. With a convenient once-daily dosage, this treatment may take 1 to 4 days to reach its full effect, ensuring you can enjoy life without the discomfort of heartburn.
R**4
Low price, very efective.
Excelente product, very similar to Nexium. Highly recommended.
J**N
This works great
This is the best value version of this type I have found, that actually works! It keeps my heartburn under control. Easy to swallow due to the size as well.
B**W
good product - great price
good product -works well- good price
J**D
Works and saves money
I've has no problems with this Nexium generic. I've purchased other generics for double this price. Works as it's supposed to and saves money.
A**E
Works as intended; has wasteful packaging and unneeded dyes
[1] Source :This is an FDA-approved, OTC generic proton-pump inhibitor [PPI] made in India by Graviti Pharmaceuticals Private Ltd. (FEI 650884781), and sourced and sold here by the marketing labeller Glenmark Therapeutics Inc. (NJ).[2] Contents :The three-bottle box is an ode to plastic waste -- each unopened bottle of about 55 cc is 3/4 empty. The active ingredient is a magnesium salt in trihydrate form of esomeprazole in a delayed release form. It is the chiral s-isomer of omeprazole, an older PPI; though chemically identical, these isomers do not have identical clinical effects. Clinical trials showed that, at appropriate standard dosages, esomeprazole provides more effective control of intragastric pH in patients with symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux disease [GERD] than omeprazole (as well as the other '-prazole' PPIs). Besides being much cheaper than Nexium, this generic is less expensive than other generic esomeprazole brands (some of which made by the same manufacturer).Two of its listed inactive ingredients, see my figure, are worth of comment. One is the gelatin used for the capsules, whose origin is unspecified. Those who have vegetarian affinities should be aware that, way more often than not, unspecified gelatin derives from animal tissues (cattle, pork, chicken) rather than cellulose. The other one is the synthetic food colorant Blue No. 2, a petroleum product (like the 2025-banned Red 3). The controversial issue of synthetic food colorants posing hyperactivity risk, in particular to those with ADHD, has received peer-reviewed, published scientific support over the last two decades, with several studies indicating a small but significant association between such dyes and children hyperactivity. The most famous is likely the 2007 Southampton study of McCann and others, a UK's clinical trial [ISRCTN4481308], which in 2008 led the EU's Parliament to ask manufacturers to remove several dyes (including FD&C Blue 2) from foods & beverages, or put on the label the warning "may have an adverse effect on activity and attention in children" -- in stark contrast to such a safety measure about a petroleum product lacking any nutritive value at all, is the FDA's 8-to-6 decision in 2011 against requiring the warning. It took 10 more years for the California's Office of Environmental Health Hazards to issue a peer-reviewed report accepting that synthetic food colorants are associated with adverse neurobehavioral outcomes in children. At any rate, adding unneeded and potentially toxic dyes simply to prettify gelatin capsules seems a daft absurdity.[3] Dosage :Clinically, the dosage varies for different patients and for their gastroesophageal conditions. The Mayo Clinic dot-org wwwebsite provides informative descriptions of the dosages; the dose and treatment duration printed in this product's package matches that recommended to manage heartburn rather than GERD.[4] Risks :Taking a higher dose (e.g., 40 mg), or if the PPI is continued well beyond the recommended course of treatment, or both, involves a number of potential side effects. While the common ones are mostly gastrointestinal and minor, a less common side effect is noteworthy. In 2011, the FDA announced the long-term use of PPIs can lead to low magnesium levels in blood (hypomagnesemia); most reports involved omeprazole or esomeprazole. Although relatively rare, this is a serious condition that can be significantly magnified when taking some antihypertensive drugs (most particularly thiazide or loop diuretics combined with beta-blockers, angiotensin receptor blockers, or ACE inhibitors). I always add a magnesium glycinate supplement when taking this or any other PPI.~~
B**A
Works good
Really works. Easy to swallow . Good price
L**E
Great price
Works great and an excellent price. I do wish they would combine the packaging as to not use so much plastic.
D**G
Good product
Does the trick!
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2 months ago
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