I have a purple pill with the number 30 on one side and ABC or ABG or AB6 on the other, what is it?
Answer:
It is not ibuprofen, nor do I beleive that it is oxycodone hcl cr 30mg, because i don't believe that it is produced in a 30mg strength ( I may be wrong about that), but i am pretty sure that it is morphine sulfate CR 30mg. I searched online by the markings via the watson pharmaceuticals database and found an image of the pill. Click on the link and see if this is your pill. http://pi.watson.com/show_image.asp?mate...
It is marketed under brand name "MS Contin" and you can read more about it at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ms_contin...
Do not take pills that are not prescribed by your doctor or you don't know what they are for!!
if its abg I'm pretty sure its a 30.mg generic Oxycontin
It isn't Ibuprofen! As the other poster said do not take it! Not that you were, but hey, feel better for having said it! PDR,(Physician's Desk Reference), offers no information, but that could be because it's a 1976 ONE, LOL! Would like you to know that, let's just say it's a drug that has to be prescribed by a doctor. You're standin' there checkin' it out, just curious, and a cop walks up. If it's a 'script drug, and you can't prove a doctor prescribed it for you....guess what? Throw the sucker in the toilet, flush it, forget it!!
Most pharmacies now carry a manual for identifying most legit manufactured medications esp made in USA. These books used to be expensive but not anylonger of most pharmacies now have them. PDR's are useless caues they only carry info paid for by the manufacturer (that't right it's an advertisement bood!) and often lack many many products esp. the generics. Hospitals ER's often stock these manuals now also.
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