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Engov Farmaco Antisbornia Compresse.

FUNZIONA BENISSIMO!

Engov è un farmaco usato per alleviare i sintomi postumi di una sbornia come mal di testa, nausea, sensazione di fastidio allo

stomaco o nausea, per esempio, causata da consumo di alcol .

Questo prodotto ha come principi attivi composti di maleato mepiramina, idrossido di alluminio, aspirina e caffeina, responsabile per alleviare il dolore e ridurre l'infiammazione, la nausea e la produzione di acido nello stomaco.


Modalità di assunzione:

1 pastiglia un’ora prima di iniziare a bere ed una finito di bere

Oppure:

1 pastiglia finito di bere prima di addormentarsi ed 1 alla mattina appena svegli se necessario


SCADENZA LOTTO 07/2025

Expiration date 07/2025


Massima serietà

Spedizione immediata



About Engov:

From the New York Times

EVER since Plato asked the question "How can we drink with least injury to ourselves?" nearly every culture has devised its own answers.

In Brazil, a popular answer is Engov (pronounced en-GOV-ee), an over-the-counter medication recommended for headache and allergy relief. Manufactured by Newlab Industria Farmaceutica in Sao Paolo, Engov is sold in tablet form.

The company traces the product's popular use back to the 1960's when a character in a Brazilian soap opera used Engov to temper his hangover. Now, a company spokeswoman said, it is used more often for hangovers than for anything else.

Debora Szuch, 18, who lives in Rio de Janeiro, prepared for a World Cup soccer celebration by taking an Engov tablet. After the last round of drinks, she took another.

"It was marvelous," Ms. Szuch said. "I felt very well and I didn't have any headache."

Engov is not sold in the United States, but its ingredients -- aluminum hydroxide, caffeine, acetylsalicylic acid and pyrilamine maleate -- can be found individually in some common products: antacids, coffee, aspirin and antihistamines.

Does that mean one can whip up a batch of Engov at home?

"You could do that," said Dr. Walter Hunt, the chief of the neurosciences and behavioral research branch of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, "but I wouldn't recommend it."