Can I buy useful prescription antibiotics OTC at a pet store?

This story says you can. I assume these anitbiotics are the same kind I normally have to buy via prescription. Or are they?

Soldier exposes drug loophole

Probably, but I believe the point of this article was:

  1. Shouldn’t do it as you do not know if the pills/tablets really contain what they say they do.
  2. It would be hard to figure out human dosage.
  3. Mis-use leads to increased danger of infections as your body becomes immune to antibiotics.

I have seen the tablets available in pet stores and can offer this advice-- don’t take them.

The pills in the pet stores are not, usually, the same exact medicines used in human beings. Usually, they are a different “salt form”, a distinction that’s hard to explain without a lot of chemistry. Differing salt forms can lead to differing dosages. Some antibiotics, gentamicin for example, can be quite toxic when overdosed. You could wind up deaf and on kidney dialysis. Also, the drugs in those packs are not pharmaceutical grade, but technical grade, a key difference in quality control.

The pills in the pet stores are designed to dissolve in a fish tank and be taken up by a fish’s system, not yours. At best, you’d be wasting your money. At worst, you could wind up much much sicker than you were before.

No one likes high prescription prices, especially pharmacists who have to listen to it all day. The pet store is not the answer, though. The four antibiotics you named are probably the cheapest available - I would be surprised at a price over $10-15 for a week or so of therapy. Aren’t you worth that?

miatachris, R.Ph.
Ole Miss '95