Renaming Sleep Aids Ambien Now Called Intermezzo

FDA just approved a subligual Ambien for "insomnia in the middle of the night followed by difficulty returning to sleep"

It has taken a few years, but the FDA has now approved Intermezzo, a low dose drug with the same active ingredient as Ambien. Zolpidem tartrate will now be in a sublingual tablet form rather than the sleeping pill, Ambien.

A rose by any other name would smell as sweet, said Shakespeare and in this case Intermezzo is still Ambien and the side-effects are the same.

For people who have difficulty staying asleep and can't fall back to sleep we recommend an herbal sleep aid that has been used for centuries, safely.

If you are looking for a completely safe and natural sleep aid that can be taken in the middle of the night and works without side-effects you owe it to yourself to try Traditional Chinese Herbal Medicine. The herbs in our iSleep Herb Pack have been used safely and effectively for hundreds of years and clinically tested on thousands of patients worldwide. Click here to read one study on over 30,000 patients who used this herbal sleep aid.

Sleeping pills have serious side effects and this issue has been raised by the FDA regarding Intermezzo. Their answer was a revision of the warning label, "patients should have at least 4 hours of bedtime remaining". The common side effects listed for this sleeping pill including headache, nausea and fatigue. As with Ambien and other prescription sleeping aids, Intermezzo can cause a person to get out of bed while not fully awake and do an activity that you do not know you are doing. Reported activities while! under t he influence of sleep medicines have included driving a car, making and eating food, having sex, talking on the phone, and sleep walking, without knowing at the time or remembering later. Chances of such adverse activity is increased if a person has consumed alcohol or taken other medicines that make them feel sleepy.





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