Expiration Date – Medicine?

July 15th, 2011 by Fioricet Leave a reply »
joeintheskywithdiamonds asked:


Hypothetically, if one had carisoprodol that said “discard by 2003″ should one continue to use these without a significant chance of injury or should one discard these hypothetical pills with haste?

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2 comments

  1. Viagra says:

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    A medical professional would say to discard the remainder of the medication because it is past its expiration date.

    However, if you were doing your own research for your own *hypothetical* situation then you would first want to examine where you have obtained this “expiration” date. Was it on a stock bottle or a repackaged bottle? Most states require that any medication obtained from a pharmacy must be given an expiration of one year or less after it is repackaged and sold. Although, the original stock bottle may have had an expiration 2 or 3 years from that point.

    2003 was almost 4 years ago. I am sure it is past its original expiration date. I would say get rid of it…. however, I have never heard of anyone getting sick from taking expired medication either unless it had something growing on it or is a liquid that has spoiled.

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    Definately throw it away.. ingredients will have changed, and I can very well make you ill…. and they won’t help you the way that they should… It is not any good anymore.. any doc will tell you: it is not good to keep ANY medicene past the expiration date…..

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