| Product dosage: Drops 100ml | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Package (num) | Per bottle | Price | Buy |
| 2 | $27.54 | $55.08 (0%) | 🛒 Add to cart |
| 3 | $25.37 | $82.62 $76.11 (8%) | 🛒 Add to cart |
| 4 | $24.28 | $110.15 $97.14 (12%) | 🛒 Add to cart |
| 5 | $23.63
Best per bottle | $137.69 $118.17 (14%) | 🛒 Add to cart |
More info:
liv52
Liv52 represents one of those interesting cases in hepatoprotective therapy - it’s been around since 1955, developed by the Himalaya Drug Company, yet we’re still having active debates about its place in modern hepatology. I remember first encountering it during my fellowship when a 58-year-old patient with alcoholic hepatitis insisted on continuing it alongside our conventional management. He’d been using it for years, swore by it, and honestly his liver enzymes were better than I’d expected given his drinking history.
liv52 drops
Liv52 drops represent one of those rare herbal formulations that somehow managed to bridge traditional Ayurvedic medicine and modern clinical practice. When I first encountered this preparation during my hepatology rotation at AIIMS back in 2005, I was frankly skeptical—another herbal remedy making grand claims. But watching Professor Sharma use it as adjuvant therapy in alcoholic hepatitis patients who weren’t responding to conventional treatment alone… that made me reconsider everything.
liv52 syrup
Liv52 syrup represents one of those interesting herbal formulations that’s been around for decades but still generates significant discussion in hepatology circles. It’s a polyherbal formulation primarily targeting liver health, though we’ve seen some interesting off-label applications in our practice. The syrup formulation makes it particularly useful for pediatric cases and patients who have difficulty swallowing tablets. The formula contains some pretty classic hepatoprotective herbs - Capparis spinosa (capers), Cichorium intybus (chicory), Terminalia arjuna, Solanum nigrum (black nightshade), and Cassia occidentalis among others.
a ret gel
A topical retinoid formulation combining tretinoin 0.025% in a novel hydrogel delivery system designed for enhanced epidermal penetration while minimizing irritation. The gel matrix incorporates humectants and barrier-supporting ceramides to counteract the drying effects typical of traditional retinoid therapies. We initially developed this formulation after observing consistent patient complaints about the irritation and peeling associated with conventional tretinoin creams - honestly, our first three prototypes were complete failures that left our test subjects with significant erythema and scaling.
Abana: Comprehensive Cardiovascular Support Through Herbal Synergy - Evidence-Based Review
Product Description: Abana represents one of those formulations that initially seemed almost too good to be true when I first encountered it during my cardiology rotation in New Delhi back in 2004. This comprehensive herbal formulation, developed through rigorous Ayurvedic principles combined with modern pharmacological understanding, serves as a cardioprotective and lipid-normalizing agent. What struck me initially wasn’t just the ingredient list but the sophisticated delivery system that seemed to enhance bioavailability beyond what I’d seen with similar herbal preparations.
abhigra
Product Description: Abhigra is a novel dietary supplement formulation specifically engineered to address chronic inflammatory conditions through a multi-targeted approach. The product combines standardized botanical extracts with enhanced bioavailability components, designed for patients who haven’t responded adequately to conventional anti-inflammatory regimens. What makes Abhigra particularly interesting isn’t just the ingredient profile - it’s the specific ratios and delivery system that took our team nearly three years to perfect. We initially struggled with the curcuminoid stability issue - kept getting inconsistent plasma levels in our early pharmacokinetic studies.
abilify
Aripiprazole represents one of the most fascinating psychopharmacological developments of the past two decades - a third-generation antipsychotic that functions as a partial dopamine agonist rather than a pure antagonist. When I first encountered this mechanism during my residency, the concept seemed almost paradoxical: how could a medication simultaneously treat psychosis while having potential antidepressant properties? The answer lies in its unique receptor profile that allows it to act as a functional stabilizer rather than simply blocking or stimulating neurotransmitter systems.
acamprol
In my early neurology practice, we had a significant cohort of patients with chronic neuropathic pain and spasticity who weren’t responding well to conventional treatments. I remember specifically working with a 62-year-old retired teacher named Margaret who had developed debilitating spasticity following a spinal cord injury. She’d been through the usual gabapentin, baclofen, even tried botulinum toxin injections with limited success and significant side effects. That’s when our research team began investigating acamprol as a potential alternative.
Accufine: Continuous Metabolic Monitoring for Diabetes Management - Evidence-Based Review
Before we dive into the formal monograph, let me give you the real picture on Accufine. We spent three years in development hell with this thing. The initial prototype was a disaster – kept giving false positives in patients with elevated CRP levels. Dr. Chen from our bioengineering team nearly quit over the sampling membrane material. He wanted the proprietary polymer, I argued for the cheaper cellulose acetate. Turns out, he was right – the polymer gave us 94% accuracy versus 82% with acetate.
