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At 10:27 AM 4/10/00 -0400, L Rhoades wrote:

>My med book (Drake and Drake Pharmaceutical Book) has Emla listed as

>capital E only. Is this is a typo in my book?

Probably, Drake and Drake Pharm 2000 has EMLA, so it has apparently been

corrected.

Judy

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It has always been EMLA in the MPR (p. 295) and my dermatologist requested I

keep it that way. It is also listed in the latest edition of the Medical

Abbreviations book by Dr. Neil as a registered tradename (all caps),

which stands for eutectic mixture of local anesthetics, which I did not know

myself until today.

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Could the doc be saying Emla cream? It is a topical local anesthetic.

R.

On Mon, 10 Apr 2000 08:13:44 -0500 " Sotelo, "

writes:

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> Patient has fourth branchial arch fistula. external opening of the

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> was dilated with a microvascular dilator after application of S/L

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> cream. Any clues?

> TIA

>

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My med book (Drake and Drake Pharmaceutical Book) has Emla listed as

capital E only. Is this is a typo in my book? When I worked for a

dermatologist, he wanted it all caps, however, I thought is his " thing " .

Did they make a mistake or it is acceptable either way?

On Mon, 10 Apr 2000 10:25:03 EDT Nanseyb@... writes:

> It is EMLA (all caps) cream. They use it to numb the skin.

>

>

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L Rhoades wrote:

> My med book (Drake and Drake Pharmaceutical Book) has Emla listed as capital E

only. Is this is a

> typo in my book?

I noted that Monthly Prescribing Reference has it in all caps -- EMLA -- so I

went to the website of

the manufacturer (AstraZeneca) and found it in caps there, too.

I'm still not sure that " Emla " isn't correct, but I'm inclined to use the caps

because the

manufacturer does.

Jayni

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On Monday, April 10, 2000 at 10:51 AM or thereabouts, Jayni wrote the

following about Drug?:

Jayni> I noted that Monthly Prescribing Reference has it in all caps

Jayni> -- EMLA -- so I went to the website of the manufacturer

Jayni> (AstraZeneca) and found it in caps there, too.

Jayni> I'm still not sure that " Emla " isn't correct, but I'm inclined

Jayni> to use the caps because the manufacturer does.

In this case, also, EMLA appears to be an acronym (more or less ...

don't ask me what happened to the " p " ), so I'd be inclined to think

that the lower-case version is erroneous.

EMLA (Eutectic Mixture of Lidocaine and Prilocaine)

Chuck

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I am going to be a pest today as I don't have many reference books here at

this hospital.

Patient has Hepatitis C and is interested in S/L Revatron therapy.

Thanks for any help.

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