cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/12917886

Image: 4 panels organized in a rectangle following a sequential order like a comic strip. The first panel is of a man with a very serious face stating, “Hey man, got any diphenhydramine?” The second panel is a grainy picture of the actor Tony Stark with a slightly inquisitive face and saying, “What’s that?” The third panel is an identical copy of the first image and saying, “Benadryl the allergy medicine.” The fourth and final panel is a grainy picture of Tony Stark rolling his eyes and taking a deep breath.

This meme is based off of a real life experience. I knew a guy that was taking NyQuil to go to sleep. I told him he’d save a lot of money and his liver if he just bought diphenhydramine since that’s the substance in NyQuil that’s making him drowsy. He said. “What’s that?” I obviously responded, “Benadryl the allergy medicine,” and he seriously sighed and rolled his eyes at me. He was so sick of my crap 😆

Edit: Yay!! I’m so happy people like a meme I created 😁

  • @[email protected]
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    4010 months ago

    Of course, generic terms for everything! A regular discussion should not be a brand endorsement

    • credit crazy
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      110 months ago

      That’s one thing I like about my home state. Everything here is independent but man it’s annoying talking with people born out of state and refer to everything using brand names I have never heard of. It gets especially annoying when there are two prominent competitors making these people even more unintelligible.

  • @douglasg14b
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    2310 months ago

    If you see him again you should advise him to not use diphenhydramine as a regular sleep aid due to it being a Anticholinergic which have negative long term effects on cognitive function.

  • @RGB3x3
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    2110 months ago

    Ketorolac, Ceterizine, Ibuprofen, Acetaminophen, I sometimes don’t even know what the brand names actually are.

    People say “Advil” and I’m like, “what’s that?”

    • BOMBSOPM
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      510 months ago

      People say “Advil” and I’m like, “what’s that?”

      Or even worse, “Motrin”

    • @isles
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      210 months ago

      What do you do for medications with multiple purposes?

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        usually just say whatever purpose is relevant to the context. if I need to be hyper-specific for some reason I’ll just say the drug’s name and maybe list off what I’m using it for. like “im taking seroquel as a sleep aid” if im talking to a medical professional since they would probably ask for the brand anyway in case of something like a recall, and would likely want to know i’m not taking it as an antipsychotic.

    • @AA5B
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      110 months ago

      deleted by creator

  • @[email protected]
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    1610 months ago

    Not autistic (never been tested, wouldn’t surprise me though).

    Anyway, I work… medically adjacent. IT support for medical folks.

    Being precise with your medications and dosages is much appreciated by everyone involved. Keep it up!

    Also, OP, depending on locale, NyQuil can have different things in it, including being up to 10% ethanol.

    But yeah, 50mg of diphenhydramine HCL, and a shot or a beer would do it for most.

  • @AA5B
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    1610 months ago

    It’s more honest. I keep wanting to, but can’t make myself. Most of the time I’m getting generic or store brand “same active ingredient as …”, so why reward the branding efforts of a company I’m not patronizing?

  • @[email protected]
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    1310 months ago

    Join the medical field and get the worst of both. Generic and various brand names are thrown around for every drug at random all the time. And if you don’t know what someone is talking about when they ask for a specific med, someone could die! Not really but it’s very annoying

    • @[email protected]
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      210 months ago

      Even worse is in the stupid system (I have to use), some things are actually HARD CODED in brand names, and some in generic. So when you’re trying to chart a patient that tells you they’re taking X, Y, and Z, you have to go digging through to find the right stuff.

  • BeautifulMind ♾️
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    9 months ago

    I usually use the name of the drug when there are multiple brands with trade names for it, or when there are trade-name drugs that use multiple formulations with different ingredients.

    For example, famotodine is the active agent in Pepcid and Zantac. Omeprazole is sold as Prilosec and Losec. Acetaminophen is in Tylenol, Tempra, and Panadol

    When I want Pseudoephedrine and not phenylephrine, they’re both branded under the trade name ‘Sudafed’ but only one of them really works for sinus pressure.

    When I want Dextromethorphan or Guaifenesin (active ingredients in Robitussin) there are lots of other brands (Nyquil, dayquil, etc) that deliver them and knowing which drug is which and what part they do means I can pick which one to use if I don’t want the other one’s shitty side effects.

    • Pennomi
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      1210 months ago

      I’m not entirely sure that’s a medicine you should take. But you do you.

        • @marcos
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          110 months ago

          As long as it’s pure, it won’t kill you.

          What’s literally “you can use it to close wounds”, but says nothing at all about whether you should.

        • @[email protected]
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          010 months ago

          You should not use it to close any wound that’s deeper than superficial. Glue seals everything inside the wound, and if you need medical attention later, that wound will have to be re-opened. I had surgery fairly recently, and I had a hematoma; the fact that it was stapled rather than glued allowed me to decompress the surgical site, whereas I would have needed to do a needle aspiration if it had been stapled.

          OTOH, you can get sterile, single use staplers fairly easily, and those are great for closing deeper wounds.

  • @Droggelbecher
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    710 months ago

    Yeah but for a reason. I just don’t want to advertise for a random Pharma company. They’re not paying me, so why would I? I also refrain from referring to other things that are known by brand name by said brand name, like paper tissues

  • @MotoAsh
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    510 months ago

    The real question is why do you like helping corporations own the chemicals? Don’t give them that W. It’s not Benadryl on every bottle of diphenhydramine.

  • @Pothetato
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    510 months ago

    Acetaminophen, you see the medicine!

    I only just googled the lyrics. Always thought he was just saying “youcetaminophen!”

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    I have this problem with organic chemistry more broadly. On the one hand, I understand that rattling off the IUPAC name of a compound is much less concise and harder to get right than just saying the brand name or chemical name (which, for pharma, is often just as bullshit of a name as the brand name). On the other, you come across names like the Eschenmoser-Claisen rearrangement vs the Johnson-Claisen rearrangement, or the Suzuki vs Stille vs Negishi vs Kumada vs Hiyama/Denmark vs Sonogashira* cross couplings. Each set consists of fundamentally the same reaction with slight variations in the specific reagents. Just saying e.g. “organozinc” instead of “Negishi” would be so much more descriptive. The authors’ names often aren’t even that helpful in an attributive sense. For instance, some of the cross couplings were actually first reported by someone else in that list (though IIRC everyone got at least one), and most of the chemists published work on at least one of the other reactions at some point.

    * Okay fine Sonogashiras are a little different what with the copper co-catalyst, but still, same mech at Pd.