Medical Disclaimer: This site provides informational comparisons only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your physician or pharmacist before making medication decisions.
Compare CELECOXIB (CELECOXIB) and DICLOFENAC POTASSIUM (Diclofenac Potassium) — clinical data, side effects, and patient experiences.
CELECOXIB, Celebrex · NSAID
How it works
12.1 Mechanism of Action Celecoxib has analgesic, anti-inflammatory, and antipyretic properties. The mechanism of action of celecoxib is believed to be due to inhibition of prostag...
Approved for
Diclofenac Potassium · NSAID
How it works
Other agent
Approved for
Estimated frequency (%) based on clinical trial data
Based on 22 Reddit discussions
CELECOXIB
47%
positive
15 threads
DICLOFENAC POTASSIUM
29%
positive
7 threads
% of discussions mentioning each side effect
15 Reddit threads analysed for CELECOXIB
Overall Sentiment
Mixed
Comparison Threads
0
Avg Post Score
26 upvotes
Most discussed side effects in community
Good morning to all! "The pain is not going to get better. what I have is a progressive disease. " Told my pharmacist today and will tell my GP and MAID shrink next week the following week Then I will schedule pain specialist. I went from being in bed in Canada to Mexico where I was standing in a
Seglentis is generically celecoxib and tramadol hydrochloride. Whether it is more effective and safer than other opioids I guess will be known soon. I still dream about a totally effective non-addictive pain medicine. I doubt this is it but at least they're still working on it. See drugs.com
I’m not sure why I’m sharing this, so many are so much worse off than I am but here I am hoping that maybe someone will have had a similar experience and may have an answer or a thought…this may be all over the place but I’ll try and stay in a two year timeline order 54f I have had back pain since
Hello, I have a few questions about Scheuermann's disease and pain management. Right now I'm at the place where the pain is becoming almost unbearable. I've tried many different pain medications, such as amitriptyline (for chronic pain), tizanidine, celecoxib, gabapentin, ketoprofen, and etoricoxib.
Sorry, this is long, I’ll try to keep this brief. Basically, I’ve had chronic back pain for as long as I’ve been alive- diagnosed with mild scoliosis at 7. Did physical therapy, had every physical therapist tell me the scoliosis wasn’t the problem. Turned 18, could take myself to a doctor, got diagn
After almost four years of suffering through various forms of chronic pain, I was finally put on a muscle relaxer (cyclobenzaprine aka Flexeril at the lowest oral dose of 5 mg ONCE per day, AND ONLY when needed during a flare - so not even the recommended dosing instructions of 5mg 3x per day, lol.
Doctors in the UK are pretty primitive about fibromyalgia and its implications. I'm a doctor myself and know how the vast majority of my colleagues are ignorant of the condition, outside of a rheumatologist they either don't bother treating it or will aggressively peddle non treatments because "it's
*The following summary was created with the*[ *Recall Browser extension*](https://www.getrecall.ai/)*, you can save this summary to your own knowledge base or create your own*[ *here*](https://www.getrecall.ai/summary/andrew-huberman/dr-sean-mackey-tools-to-reduce-and-manage-pain)*.* ## Dr. Sean Mac
Community discussions are sourced from public Reddit threads. Content reflects individual opinions and is not medical advice.
7 Reddit threads analysed for DICLOFENAC POTASSIUM
Overall Sentiment
Mixed
Comparison Threads
0
Avg Post Score
2,655 upvotes
Most discussed side effects in community
We killed Joseph Glass for the first time on August 18th, 1999. I knew he was a strange case since day one. Never seen a guy so happy to die before. It was like we were doing him a favor. He refused the automatic appeal. He refused to be seen by a chaplain. He just wanted it over with. It had only t
**I am not The OOP, OOP is** u/throwaway65312551 **My [36F] husband [39M] of 13 years is against having our cat euthanized; implies I want to 'murder' the cat for being an 'inconvenience'** **TRIGGER WARNING:** >!death of a beloved pet, mentions of death of a parent, emotional and verbal abuse,
**\*\*\*UPDATE 9-7-2024\*\*\*** Sorry it took a while, but I finally got test results back from the doctor. I was expecting the worst given some of the comments, but here are the doctor's notes for the physical/blood work. All in all, not bad for 3 straight years of Taco Bell almost every day. (I co
I am NOT OP. OP is u/[u/throwaway65312551](https://www.reddit.com/user/throwaway65312551/). This was posted 6 years ago. \--- [Original](https://www.reddit.com/r/relationships/comments/42aasw/my_36f_husband_39m_of_13_years_is_against_having/) We've had our cat for 7 years. We don't know how old he
Hello everyone. My partner posted about two weeks ago about an orange stray cat that we had rescued and adopted. He had many health ailments that we were taking care of including hyperthyroidism, kidney and liver disease, a heart murmur, potassium deficiency, tooth decay and we later found out as we
I found this weird honestly. In my country, on the FDA site it says that benzos are controlled and need a prescription. So obviously you cant get it without visiting a doctor. SSRIs such as sertaline are uncontrolled but need a prescription. How could something be uncontrolled but still need a pres
Community discussions are sourced from public Reddit threads. Content reflects individual opinions and is not medical advice.
Both CELECOXIB and DICLOFENAC POTASSIUM belong to the NSAID class. While they share a similar mechanism of action, differences in pharmacokinetics, dosing, and side effect profiles may make one more suitable than the other for individual patients.
CELECOXIB carries 4 FDA warnings. DICLOFENAC POTASSIUM carries 4 FDA warnings. Patients should discuss all warnings and contraindications with their healthcare provider before starting or switching medications..
This comparison is for informational purposes only. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making medication decisions.