Quinolone antibiotics (including ciprofloxacin) may cause serious and possibly permanent tendon damage (such as tendonitis, tendon rupture), nerve problems
Ciprofloxacin is contraindicated in patients with a history of tendon disorders related to tendonitis and tendon rupture in all ages .(6). The use of
Ciprofloxacin and other antibiotics that are known as fluoroquinolones may be associated with tendon rupture, tendonitis
Quinolone antibiotics (including ciprofloxacin) may cause serious and possibly permanent tendon damage (such as tendonitis, tendon rupture), nerve problems in
Examples of fluoroquinolone antibiotics include ciprofloxacin Tendonitis and tendon rupture (especially but not limited to Achilles tendon)
ciprofloxacin or levofloxacin should no longer be prescribed Tendon damage (especially to the Achilles tendon but also other tendons)
Tendon rupture or swelling of the tendon (tendinitis). Tendon problems can happen in people of all ages who take ciprofloxacin. Tendons are tough cords of
by Y Khaliq 2024 Cited by 436Pefloxacin and ciprofloxacin were most frequently implicated, but tendon Ciprofloxacin, bilateral Achilles tendonitis and unilateral tendon rupturea case
Major Side Effects of Ciprofloxacin Tendon problems, including tendonitis and tendon rupture Nerve damage, which can potentially be permanent
Comments
Mal
I think Bill grew a lot, and Debbie grew the most. But Debbie still feels like she has more demons to confront, just not as many. She'll be fine.
I'm usually a BTB fan, but a well earned RAAC can feel good too. This was neither.
It's got some 'living well is the best revenge, communicate you stupid idiots, holding onto hatred is like holding onto poison, and lot's of lil' cliche gems.
I will back you up on the tendon thing. Idk much about genetics, but through sheer effort of training for almost a year, my tendons got super strong. I gained ...some...muscle....and that's nice. My cardio improved a lot. And I stretched daily. But to my tendons....wew. They got super tough. I was able to do flagpole stances and I can't honestly believe it was due to just core muscle.
Anyway, you're the real deal....self insert clint abbot :wink: Thanks for sharing this story.
Thing that puzzles me: Dana got her arm lopped off, and it was a whole ordeal, involving stitching and reattaching tendons etc, to reattach it so it could regenerate. But now she gets both legs lopped off, and she can reconnect them without similar endeavors and difficulty? Wat? Legs are at least as complicated as arms, when it comes to attachment points, despite a more limited range of motion. Why the change? Has Dana gotten better at healing, or did Lily give her a double dose of Mike Magic? If so, y we no get sex scene? Kidding, mostly. But really, wat?
Love this series and HfHM! Also Last of Her Kind and Iceman, lol... Your work is excellent!
But... just to add another technical criticism: Chris would also have noticed the, likely 2nd degree, burns to her face, arms and hands from the hot stew. Maybe even more quickly than any bruising. Bruising can take several minutes to hours to show up. 2nd and 3rd degree burns can show up in a few seconds (at the most a couple of minutes).
On another note: the criticism that someone had of her not using the bread knife... Idiot, she would use the weapon nearest at hand. If it was a bread knife, then it was a bread knife. Maybe the chef's knife was in a drawer/knife-block/counter on the other side of the kitchen. Or worse, behind the husband. How was she supposed to get that in such a case? And I have a bread knife that has just enough of a tip to stab someone if enough force is used. Or better yet, she may have slashed his arms, face - and best yet - neck with the bread in knife. One of my sharpest edges knives in my kitchen is my 14 serrated bread knife. Could easily cut all kinds of arteries, veins, muscles, tendons, etc. if used to slash. Think of all the possibilities before you critisize.