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[S563]Slow Release Nitrogen Fertilizer
by John Scott, Joh

Ultram is marketed in some seventy countries around the world for the treatment of moderate to severe pain in multiple dose format. The simple rule is that the dose should be individualised so that each person takes the smallest dose required to produce the required relief from pain. Normally, this means that patients start with a very low daily dose and slowly increase the dosage every three days until a stable and effective concentration in the blood stream is achieved. After that, the level is maintained by taking one tablet every four to six hours. No-one should take more than 400mg per day. If there is a more urgent need for pain relief and that need outweighs the risk of dependence, people may take an initial high dosage. This well-established system may be about to change in the US.

Since 2006, Labopharm Inc. has been seeking approval from the Food and Drug Administration for the once-daily version of ultram already approved in twenty-two European countries. The format is based on Contramid technology which allows both rapid and sustained drug release to maintain stable blood levels within the therapeutic range over the twenty-four hour period. Now some two years into its campaign, the company is scheduled to meet with the director of the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research which will trigger a thirty day deadline for the FDA to give its decision. If that decision is positive, Labopharm Inc. has a further sixty days to comply with the labelling requirements. This could mean a formal approval for the slow-release version of ultram issued in August 2008.

This has been an unusually slow process. The company originally planned the product launch for September 2006, but the FDA has required more clinical trials to be undertaken as a precondition of taking the approval process forward. Although it is good that the FDA has become more cautious in giving approval to new products, this is a variation on a well-established product. Applying the same caution may seem somewhat unfair given the significant increase in the cost of the process. According to Labopharm Inc. the FDA gave notice in May 2007 that a different statistical method was to be used to analyse the clinical data. This required further testing to produce more data compatible with the new method. The disagreement about methodology affected the extent to which the company could rely only on data produced from those completing the trials. The FDA was concerned that the exclusion of data from those dropping out of the trials could skew the results on safety. But, for all the delay, the company is confident that the once-daily version of ultram is effective and safe.

Let us assume that it is approved in the US and go back to the initial statement about dosage. At present, it is easy for people to forget when a dose is due. Taking too little is less of a problem. Taking too much is always a problem. Because many of the people taking are older, forgetfulness is more common. Further, if a patient is on a four-hour schedule, this means waking during the night to maintain the required blood concentration. Labopharm Inc. believes that a once-daily regime will improve compliance. The evidence from the European markets on this point is encouraging.


In a side-dress application, the nitrogen fertilizer is applied along the sides of the plants, about six inches away from the stems, either along the row or around individual plants, such as tomatoes.

A Purdue publication on vegetable gardening, HO-32-W, suggests using ammonium nitrate, which has an analysis of 33-0-0, as the fertilizer material. However, it's not readily available, and other forms of fertilizer can be used on an equivalent basis.

One is urea, which has an analysis of 46-0-0. It can become volatile, escape into the air and burn the leaves and should be incorporated immediately by lightly tilling it into the soil or watering it in with irrigation.

The general application rate for ammonium nitrogen is about one pound, or about one pint, per 100 feet of row. For three feet of row, that's one tablespoon (one teaspoon per foot). When urea is used, apply slightly less, or about 1 1/2 cups per 100 feet of row, 2 1/4 teaspoons per three feet of row or 3/4 teaspoon per foot of row. For example, if you side-dress tomato plants, spaced four feet apart, you should use one level tablespoon (three teaspoons) of urea around each plant.

The time for side-dressing depends on the crop. Side-dress tomatoes about two weeks after the first fruit sets, two weeks after picking the first tomato and again one month later. The cole crops (cabbage, cauliflower and broccoli) should be side-dressed three weeks after setting out plants, onions about one to two weeks after bulb formation and peppers after the first fruit sets.

Side-dress cucumbers one week after blossoming begins and three weeks later; peas and beans, after heavy bloom and set of pods; and sweet corn when plants are 8-10 inches tall and one week after tassels appear. It's important not to apply more than the recommended amount of nitrogen or damage to plant roots can occur.

The third week of June is the time to ...

*Obtain a copy of the publication, 'Home Gardener's Guide', from an Extension Service office in Indiana for details on fertilizing vegetable crops or download it at www.hort.purdue. on the Internet.

*Deadhead or remove spent blossoms from early-blooming perennials to prevent seed formation and encourage re-bloom later this season or next year.

*Remove vegetable crops such as lettuce, which have bolted (formed seed stalks), and replant the areas with bush green beans.

*Thin fruit from apple trees after the June drop of excess fruit. Space remaining fruit about 6 inches apart (one per cluster on the average), to obtain larger and higher quality fruit.

*Plant seeds of cole crops (cabbage, broccoli and cauliflower) to obtain transplants to set out in late July for a fall harvest.
Article Source : Pg. 21

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Both John Scott & Steve Buchanan are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

John Scott has sinced written about articles on various topics from Quit Smoking, PPC Advertising and Fitness. John Scott is a professional contributor to sites like
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