Common Uses: This medicine is a prostaglandin used to treat glaucoma.
Generic Name: E: TRAVOPROST (tra-VOH-prost)
[Travatan]. Medications should only be taken in accordance with the advice of your medical professional.
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More about Travatan :
How to use this Medicine: Follow the directions for using this medicine provided by your doctor. REMOVE CONTACT LENSES before using this medicine. Wait at least 15 minutes after using this medicine before inserting your lenses. TO USE THIS MEDICINE, first, wash your hands. Tilt your head back and with your index finger, pull the lower eyelid away from the eye to form a pouch. Turn the bottle upside down and allow a drop to form on the tip. Gently tap the bottle to allow the drop to fall into the pouch, look downward and gently close your eyes. Immediately use your finger to apply pressure at the corner of the eye near the nose and continue to apply gentle pressure for 1 or 2 minutes after using the medicine. Do not blink and keep your eyes closed for 1 or 2 minutes. Remove excess medicine around your eye with a clean tissue, being careful not to touch your eye. Wash your hands to remove any medicine that may be on them. If you need to administer 2 drops or any other kind of eye medicine, wait 5 minutes before administering the second drop or other medicine. TO PREVENT GERMS from entering your medicine, do not touch the applicator tip to any surface, including your eye. STORE THIS MEDICINE between 36 and 77 degrees F (2 and 25 degrees C) in a tightly-closed container away from heat, moisture, and light. IF YOU MISS A DOSE OF THIS MEDICINE, use it as soon as possible. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the missed dose and go back to your regular dosing schedule. Do not use 2 doses at once.
Cautions: Green/blue or blue/gray eyes may turn brown from the use of this medicine. This change may not be noticeable for months to several years after starting this medicine. THIS MEDICINE MAY CAUSE a darkening of your eyelid in the treated eye. There may also be eyelash changes such as increased length, color, thickness, or number. All of these effects may be permanent. DO NOT USE THIS MEDICINE within 5 minutes of any other eye medicines. KEEP ALL DOCTOR AND LABORATORY APPOINTMENTS while you are using this medicine. This medicine may cause blurred vision. Make sure your vision is clear before driving or performing any task that requires good vision. BEFORE YOU BEGIN TAKING ANY NEW MEDICINE, either prescription or over-the-counter, check with your doctor or pharmacist. FOR WOMEN: DO NOT USE THIS MEDICINE if you are pregnant. IF YOU SUSPECT THAT YOU COULD BE PREGNANT, contact your doctor immediately. IT IS UNKNOWN IF THIS MEDICINE IS EXCRETED in breast milk. IF YOU ARE OR WILL BE BREAST-FEEDING while you are using this medicine, check with your doctor or pharmacist to discuss the risks to your baby.
Possible Side Effects: SIDE EFFECTS, that may go away during treatment, include burning, stinging, dry eyes, itching, feeling of a foreign body in the eye, dizziness, or headache. If they continue or are bothersome, check with your doctor. CHECK WITH YOUR DOCTOR AS SOON AS POSSIBLE if you experience a change in vision; any change in the appearance of the eyes, including color, eye redness, or swelling; redness on the inside of eyelid; change in appearance of the eyelashes, including length or color; back pain; cough; chest pain; depression; joint pain; nervousness; fever with runny nose or congestion; difficulty urinating; upset stomach; or weight loss. If you notice other effects not listed above, contact your doctor, nurse, or pharmacist.
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The North Dakota Supreme Court refused
Tuesday to order that a proposal to change the state's pharmacy ownership law
be put on the November ballot, but a supporter of the change promised the fight
would continue. The voter initiative sought to abolish North Dakota's requirement
that most pharmacies in the state be owned by pharmacists. Industry officials
say it is the only law of its kind in the country, and its critics say the law
prevents large retailers, such as Walgreen Co. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc., from
offering less expensive prescription drugs through pharmacies they own. Last
month, Secretary of State Al Jaeger disqualified the measure from appearing
on the November ballot because the circulated petition did not include a required
list of the proposal's 25 sponsors. Its backers appealed directly to the North
Dakota Supreme Court, which concluded unanimously that Jaeger was right.
"The right to initiate and refer laws is part of the fabric of our liberty
as North Dakotans," Justice Dale Sandstrom wrote in the court's opinion
on Tuesday. "But the people of North Dakota -- through the state constitution
-- have also specified mandatory requirements for the exercise of this right."
Among those requirements, Sandstrom wrote, was that an initiative petition include
the names of its sponsors. The North Dakota Constitution says a voter initiative
must be sponsored by at least 25 eligible North Dakota voters, whose names and
addresses are listed on the petition itself. Supporters of the initiative conceded
that the petition was circulated without an attached list of sponsors, but claimed
the error was minor. They argued that the constitution's language requires that
a list of sponsors be submitted to the secretary of state but does not specify
that the list be part of the petition itself.
Tammy Ibach, a spokeswoman for the initiative campaign, said in a statement
Tuesday that the effort to change the law would continue. The initiative petition
was circulated after the North Dakota House voted down legislation last year
to abolish the ownership restrictions. "The opportunity for North Dakotans
to have more options in where they purchase their prescription drugs is delayed,
but the subject will remain alive and the commitment to having this law changed
remains steadfast," Ibach's statement said. |