Top answers from doctors based on your search:
Tramadol hcl 50 mg tablet
A female asked:

Dr. Heidi Fowleranswered
Psychiatry 26 years experience
Hi. : Hi. I can't diagnose the cause of your symtoms and so i can't tell you what to do about them. But i will provide some information about tramadol.
... Read More
5.3k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 34-year-old female asked:

Dr. Brijesh Chandwanianswered
Orofacial Pain 12 years experience
Yes: Tylenol (acetaminophen) should be fine especially if it helps. Run it by your doctor though. Long term tylenol (acetaminophen) use is not recommende... Read More
5.2k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 50-year-old male asked:

Dr. Andrew Germanovichanswered
Pain Management 14 years experience
If you're not overly: sedated from the tramadol, it will work better in combination with Tylenol (acetaminophen), (acetaminophen) than Tylenol (acetaminophen) alone.
3.3k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 59-year-old female asked:

Dr. Ew Christensenanswered
Family Medicine 29 years experience
Tramadol: The maximum dose of tramadol is 400mg total in a day. Tramadol should be increased slowly over time only if needed - make sure you do not increase yo... Read More
3.7k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 30-year-old member asked:

Dr. Gurmukh Singhanswered
Pathology 50 years experience
5.6k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 39-year-old member asked:

Dr. Brian Leanswered
Pain Management 18 years experience
Narcotics: Both Percocet and tramadol are opioids. Percocet is a combination of oxycodone and acetaminophen. It is a more powerful opioid than tramadol.
4.9k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 30-year-old male asked:

Dr. R. Jan Gurleyanswered
34 years experience
Yes. With caveats.: Tramadol acts on a specific type of opioid receptor. While it has less risk for dependency and addiction, there is still risk. It also has anti-depres... Read More
4.9k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
A 39-year-old member asked:

Dr. Lauren Elsonanswered
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 17 years experience
Different classes: There is no way to compare the strength of these medications- tramadol is a pain killer. It works very differently that flexeril, (cyclobenzaprine hc... Read More
4.9k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 50-year-old member asked:
A 22-year-old female asked:

Dr. Paul Grinanswered
Pain Management 37 years experience
Not recommended: Tramadol considered Category C - Risk cannot be ruled out. Ask your OB-GYN for more information. Good luck.
3.2k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
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