Special Report
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
This special report is designed to help you and your doctor quickly choose the least-ototoxic non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug(s) (NSAIDs) that may help you.
There are a number of NSAID drugs used to reduce inflammation. The 7 classes of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in this report include the
- Acetic acids
- COX-2 Inhibitors
- Fenamates
- Oxicams
- Propionic acids
- Salicylates and
- Miscellaneous NSAIDs.
All of these drugs have been reported to damage your ears (are ototoxic) in some way or another—such as causing hearing loss, tinnitus or balance problems.
However, some of these drugs are much more ototoxic than others. In order to protect your ears from the ear-damaging side effects of such drugs, obviously you want to take the least ototoxic drug that will do the job.
Wouldn’t it be nice to know instantly whether the drug your doctor is prescribing for you has a high risk of ototoxicity or a low risk. For example, wouldn’t you like to know which Propionic acid has had more than 1,000 people reporting experiencing tinnitus as opposed to another drug in the same class that has only had 9 reports of tinnitus?
This report ranks the drugs in each class from those with the lowest risk of causing tinnitus or hearing loss to those with the greatest risk.
Using this special report, you can now compare the drugs within each class of NSAIDs, and also compare between the various classes of NSAID drugs. The result? You can ask your doctor to prescribe the least ototoxic drug(s) that will do the job and thereby reduce your risk of experiencing tinnitus or hearing loss.
BONUS: In addition to the Non-steroidal Anti-inflammatory drugs, this new revised and expanded special report also gives you the same information in 21 different tables regarding:
- Anti-hypertensive drugs
- Benzodiazepine drugs
- HMG-COA Reductase Inhibitor (Statin) drugs
- Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI) drugs, and
- Common Classes of Antibiotics
Get your own copy of this invaluable 36-page special eBook report now for only $15.00. In just 10 minutes, you can be reading which non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (or the other 5 classes of drugs also included) have the fewest reports of ototoxicity.
Note: If you have purchased, or are going to purchase the new 4th edition of the 1,662 page, 3-volume book set Ototoxic Drugs Exposed, you don’t need to purchase this special report as all the information in this report is included in Appendix A in this new edition of Ototoxic Drugs Exposed.