I walked home with this med after getting a tube put in to relieve pain from a 5-7mm kidney stone, because the equipment wasn't available to take it out just then in the world's capital of medicine (availability was 2-3 weeks away) call that good insurance and always paying co-pays. I'm not taking it, messed me up, calling back tomorrow to tell them that, again. Fish it out like should have happened day 1, not a second surgery, all after 2nd cat scan 2nd x-ray, 2nd er trip, second pre-surgury, and multiple calls to people barely able to offer favors: as in answering a question without nurse'tude. All to see if this magic dissolve can crank down a 7mm stone into 4mm or something. Maybe I'm stupid, dunno, that's up for peer review currently. And when asking the "doctor receptionist" to ask the Doctor about a side effect, and how much bleeding is too much bleeding, don't believe them, you'll just get annoyed later that night if you allow that foolishness to pass as information. Note: Why does it seem like things that "didn't happen" always happen to some(me)? Like post surgery, when I received a cold sore I never had before, a raw wound I never had from the stint-insert (I'm bringing a tube of neospirine to demonstrate what a lube for vinyl gloves might look like), and a flu like feeling. Every hear about bad 5% chance, 1% chance, etc, stuff happening? - that's not real world #s, millions of people hobbling around are in the billionth of a percentile of these chances. Nearly every time I go to the hospital, stuff happens: but I've learned not to say anything, because the stuff never, um, really happened, and that will just make ya more annoyed to hear that from one with a condescending tone. To the good in the industry: you deserve a thanks for your service to the country and ya don't get paid enough - the others are young proxies for the anxiety med industry. Consider liking this comment if you experience the 5% chance of messed up stuff nearly ever time.Read More Read Less