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Tag: Librium

Explore our medication guides and pharmacology articles within this category.

Understanding Why Would Oxazepam Show Up on a Drug Test?

4 min read
Approximately 26% of benzodiazepine false-positive drug test cases, according to one study, were linked to the use of other medications, highlighting the complexity behind results. This is one of the key reasons why understanding why **oxazepam** may show up on a drug test is more complex than simply ingesting the medication itself.

Valium: What was the most used drug in the 1970s?

4 min read
By 1978, over 2.3 billion Valium pills were sold in the U.S. alone, making Valium the most prescribed and widely used medication of the decade. Understanding **what was the most used drug in the 1970s** reveals a pivotal period in pharmacology, marked by the widespread acceptance of tranquilizers and the subsequent reckoning with their risks.

What Kind of Drug Is Chlordiazepoxide?

4 min read
As the first benzodiazepine to be developed, chlordiazepoxide was synthesized in 1955 and approved for medical use in 1960. This medication, originally sold under the brand name Librium, is a central nervous system (CNS) depressant primarily used to manage anxiety and treat symptoms associated with acute alcohol withdrawal. Understanding what kind of drug is chlordiazepoxide involves recognizing its pharmacological class, mechanism of action, and potential for dependence.

What drugs were they giving the girls in Queen's Gambit?: Decoding Fictional 'Xanzolam'

4 min read
In the acclaimed Netflix series *The Queen's Gambit*, fictional chess prodigy Beth Harmon and the other girls in the Methuen Home orphanage are given mysterious green and white pills. These tranquilizers, which they call 'vitamins' but are later named 'xanzolam,' serve as a pivotal plot device and represent a real-world class of addictive sedative medications commonly used in the mid-20th century.