SKU: 32322309038

Hi-Tech Pharmaceuticals | Pain-Rx | 90 Tablets

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Hi-Tech Pharmaceuticals | Pain-Rx | 90 TabletsHerbal mix for pain relief with salicin, boswellia, and chill out plants Hi Tech Pharmaceuticals Pain Rx is a mix of plant extracts aimed at easing discomfort with a bunch of traditional herbs instead of one big dose ingredient. The plan is simple: pack several time tested pain relief, anti inflammatory, and relaxing plants into a tablet that breaks down fast thanks to Explotab tech. That could be cool if you want more variety than just plain turmeric

Herbal mix for pain relief with salicin, boswellia, and chill-out plants

Hi-Tech Pharmaceuticals Pain-Rx is a mix of plant extracts aimed at easing discomfort with a bunch of traditional herbs instead of one big-dose ingredient. The plan is simple: pack several time-tested pain-relief, anti-inflammatory, and relaxing plants into a tablet that breaks down fast thanks to Explotab tech. That could be cool if you want more variety than just plain turmeric or boswellia. The downside is obvious: all 12 ingredients are in a 600 mg prop blend, so you don't know the exact doses and can't check them against studies.

The star here with the best backup is white willow, standardized to 90% salicin. Salicin is the key compound that acts like a natural pain reliever through pathways similar to salicylates, and white willow has been researched for back aches and muscle pain. But dose matters: studies usually show the total salicin amount, which is often way more than what fits in a packed 600 mg blend. Boswellia extract is solid too—its boswellic acids mess with 5-lipoxygenase and inflammation signals, making it a real player for joint comfort when dosed right. Turmeric fits in well, with curcuminoids hitting NF-kB and COX pathways for inflammation, but results depend a lot on dose and how well it's absorbed. Without a listed curcuminoid amount or enhanced form, keep expectations real.

Phellodendron amurense bark adds isoquinoline alkaloids like berberine types, used traditionally for inflammation and stress. Valerian and lactuca virosa probably handle the 'chill out' part by easing tension and helping you relax, which can

Key Highlights

  • 600 mg prop blend with 12 ingredients—this is a real multi-herb setup, not just one plant with fluff. It covers pain, inflammation, and tension from different angles, but yeah, individual doses are hidden.
  • White willow standardized to 90% salicin—easily the most studied herbal pain helper here. That salicin is what gives it the classic relief punch, making this a standout on the label.
  • Boswellia extract for inflammation support—boswellic acids are popular in joint formulas because they tweak leukotriene signals. It's one of the stronger natural options for feeling more comfortable.
  • Turmeric extract brings anti-inflammatory vibes—curcuminoids target NF-kB, COX, and oxidative stress. In a stacked blend like this, it makes sense, even with the dose not shown.
  • Valerian and lactuca virosa add a tension-relief twist—not every pain product hits the nerve side of being sore or tight. These herbs aim to ease that wound-up feeling along with the inflammation.
  • Phellodendron amurense bark is a cool, less-common pick—this extract shows up in inflammation and stress blends, giving this a step up from basic knockoff pain supps.
  • Naringen and 6,7-dihydroxybergamottin hint at better absorption or metabolism tweaks—these are often added to affect how ingredients work in your body. That's a smart touch you don't see much in this category.
  • Yerba mate keeps it low-key stim instead of super sleepy—some pain stuff drags you down, but this adds a mild lift to fit the herbal vibe without going overboard.

Who Is This For?

  • Adults with ongoing joint tightness or overuse aches wanting a plant mix that hits multiple spots instead of one herb. White willow, boswellia, turmeric, and phellodendron give it wider comfort coverage than basic single-ingredient joint stuff.
  • Gym folks and active types feeling roughed up from repeat workouts, long stands, or hard jobs. It's about easing post-activity soreness with valerian and lactuca virosa for calm, not stim-powered performance.
  • People who've done plain turmeric or boswellia and want to add pain herbs plus relax support. Pain-Rx feels like a full herbal discomfort blend, not your typical recovery supp.
  • Folks where aches get worse from stress, bad unwind, or that tired-but-sore late-day vibe. Valerian and wild lettuce target both body comfort and chilling your nerves.
  • Adults who like easy tablets over powders, big capsule stacks, or liquids. Two per dose is simple for work, trips, or your gym bag.
  • Seasoned supp users who know prop blends hide doses but still wanna try a broad herbal from a solid brand. Best if you judge by how you feel, not assuming clinical amounts.

How to Use

Go with 2 tablets and water as your normal dose. For starters, try 1 or 2 earlier to check tolerance, since it has valerian, lactuca virosa, yerba mate, and metabolism tweakers. Time it 30-60 minutes before activity or a tough day for breakdown and uptake. Okay with food if your stomach's picky, but away from big meals might show effects clearer. Skip stacking with tons of caffeine, other pain supps, or grapefruit stuff—the label already has yerba mate, naringen, and 6,7-dihydroxybergamottin. Brand allows up to 3 doses a day, but ease in till you know your response. No strict cycling needed, but rethink if you add meds, get gut issues, or feel too chill or wired. Keep it sealed in a cool, dry spot away from heat and moisture to maintain the tablets.

What to Expect

First 10-20 minutes, probably nothing big besides swallowing tablets—this isn't a feel-it-fast supp. By 30-90 minutes, if it suits you, you'll notice less edge, tension, or ache more than a huge energy change. Yerba mate might give a soft alert feel, and valerian plus wild lettuce could settle you down based on how you react. Over a few days, check if daily moves, after-gym soreness, or end-of-day aches feel easier. In 2-4 weeks of steady use, benefits show as better ongoing comfort from the herb mix, not a build-up like creatine. With hidden doses, results can differ a lot person to person compared to open-label, study-dosed stuff.

Key Ingredients

  • White Willow 90% extract — Amount not disclosed — Standardized salicin support for classic botanical pain relief
  • Boswellia extract — Amount not disclosed — Boswellic acid support for joints, mobility, and stiffness
  • Turmeric extract — Amount not disclosed — Curcuminoid-style inflammatory support for everyday comfort
  • Valerian extract — Amount not disclosed — Relaxation support when tension amplifies physical discomfort
  • Lactuca virosa extract — Amount not disclosed — Wild lettuce support for a calmer, less edgy feel
  • Yerba Mate extract — Amount not disclosed — Low-stim lift to balance the calming herbal profile
  • Naringen — Amount not disclosed — Potential bioavailability support built into the blend
  • 6-7 Dihydroxybergamottin — Amount not disclosed — Grapefruit-like metabolic modulation for formulation support

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the total active blend in Hi-Tech Pain-Rx?

The active system is a 600 mg proprietary blend per 2-tablet serving. That blend contains 12 ingredients, including white willow, turmeric, boswellia, valerian, phellodendron, yerba mate, naringen, and 6,7-dihydroxybergamottin, but Hi-Tech does not disclose the amount of each individual ingredient.

Is Pain-Rx clinically dosed?

It cannot be verified as clinically dosed because the label does not reveal individual ingredient amounts. Given that 12 actives share a 600 mg blend, several ingredients are likely below the doses used in stronger human research when taken as standalones.

What are the main evidence-backed ingredients in Pain-Rx?

White willow standardized to 90% salicin, boswellia extract, and turmeric extract are the strongest mainstream comfort-support ingredients on the label. Those ingredients have the most recognizable human evidence for pain, mobility, and inflammatory signaling support, even though the exact amounts here are hidden.

How much caffeine is in Pain-Rx?

The product contains yerba mate extract, so it is not stimulant-free, but the exact caffeine content is not disclosed. That means users sensitive to caffeine should start conservatively and avoid stacking it with large doses of coffee, energy drinks, or pre-workouts until they know their response.

Can I take Pain-Rx more than once per day?

Brand guidance indicates 2 tablets up to 3 times daily, with a maximum of 6 tablets per day. Still, because the formula includes valerian, yerba mate, white willow, and enzyme-interaction compounds, it is wise to start with the minimum effective use rather than jumping to maximum daily intake.

What does Explotab technology mean in this formula?

Explotab is sodium starch glycolate, a tablet disintegrant used to help tablets break apart efficiently after ingestion. It is not an active pain ingredient, but it is a real formulation feature intended to improve practical tablet performance.

Can I stack Pain-Rx with ibuprofen, aspirin, or other pain relievers?

That is not something to do casually without medical guidance. White willow provides salicin-related activity, and the formula also contains turmeric and boswellia, so stacking with NSAIDs, aspirin, or blood thinners deserves caution.

Are there medication interaction concerns with Pain-Rx?

Yes. Naringen and 6,7-dihydroxybergamottin are the biggest flags because they are associated with grapefruit-like effects on drug metabolism, and white willow adds another consideration for blood-thinning and pain-relief medications.

Is this better for acute pain relief or long-term joint support?

The formula looks designed to do a little of both, but expectations should stay realistic. White willow and the calming herbs suggest acute 'take the edge off' intent, while boswellia and turmeric fit longer-term comfort support, yet the proprietary blend prevents strong dose-based claims either way.

Who is this product best suited for?

It is best for adults who want a broad-spectrum herbal discomfort formula in tablets and who understand that the label is not fully transparent. If you specifically want exact clinical doses of turmeric, boswellia, or salicin, a fully disclosed formula would be the better fit.

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K. Ryan Kane
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 4
I enjoyed this book immensely
Format: Paperback
A pioneering book! It breaks new ground and proposes new ideas that are plausible. I enjoyed this book immensely. But with every pioneering book comes beliefs that may not always be what they seem. I withheld one star because there are some ideas proposed that I found hard to believe entirely. I like the fact that Dr. Schoch includes Biblical passages but I don't agree with the majority of his interpretations. For example, Ezekiel's writings and visions are not about shapes he saw in the sky that Dr. Schoch thinks are from solar outbursts or auroral displays. Instead, most of those are visions he had of the "Last Days." But he didn't know exactly what he was seeing so he did his best to describe the things he saw. The other point I would like to make is that not all of the glyphs from thousands of years ago could be describing auroral displays or solar outbursts. I would imagine that if solar flares were racing toward Earth, (1) there wouldn't be enough time to look at them and study their shapes because you would be racing for cover, (2) they would be too bright whereas nobody could actually look at them long enough to study their shapes even if they had modern sunglasses, and (3) there would be a lot more evidence of scorched and burned areas of Earth so that it would be more obvious if solar activity was what had set society back thousands of years. But I don't recall Dr. Schoch theorizing about these things. Overall the book is great and I think he right about a lot of things. Highly recommended!
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Reviewed in the United States on October 1, 2014
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Carol E.
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
WHY YOU SHOULD BUY THIS BOOK
Format: Paperback
Forgotten Civilization by Dr. Robert Schoch Why should you buy this book? 1) You're already looking at it so you must have some interest in this topic. 2) Dr. Schoch has a great ability to take his, or others, theories and support them with well researched scientific data. This is helpful to those of us who are curious about alternative explanations but are still dependent on the "scientific thinking" paradigm. (He doesn't make statements like "when humans bred with aliens in 20,823 BC..."). 3) He always makes you think about conventional wisdom in a new way. For instance, in this book - the age of Easter Island statues (moai). How DID they get buried so deeply when they (conventionally) only go back to a South Pacific Polynesian settlement times?? I have stood in front of the moais on Easter Island and read many books on it's history and it never occurred to me to question the timeline. It takes that unique geologist perspective which Dr Schoch brings to his writings. 4) He introduces you to other researchers or writers that you will want to know more about. Like Thomas Brophy, Anthony Peratt, Paul LaViolette and many others. 5) The Appendices. Some excellent information on multiple topics included at the end of the book. 6) Because Dr. Schoch has gone where many others SHOULD go - against conventional archeological/historical wisdom which makes no sense. His initial theories on the age of the Sphinx as a young academic were very daring and absolutely correct. The geological community had no problem with his ideas - but Egyptologists did, and they have been after him ever since. Choosing a controversial research path has meant some changes in his academic career I'm sure, as "Academics," for all it's spouting of tremendous support for new knowledge and research is very much mired in politically correct concrete. (Go to Egypt and look for yourself. Even a casual tourist will see how wrong standard academic theories are currently). 7) I guarantee you will learn new and interesting things that just may change your life - or at the very least, change the way you think about the future. -C. Engel
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Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2012
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★★★★★ 3
A Book About Everything and Nothing
This was a great idea for a book and it's too bad that Mr. Schoch decided not to write it. Some of the ideas about solar events, the way the plasma manifested in the sky as it relates to ancient petroglyphs is fascinating. Mr. Schoch spent very little time in this space however (in spite of the book's title). Instead we got a brief, incomplete overview coupled with a survey of every piece of fringe science out there from the memory of water, to quantum entanglement to telepathy. There was the obligatory chapter on his work with the Sphinx of course. It always comes back to the Sphinx with this guy. Not an original thought in the book, but there was plenty of promotion of fringe science, especially the work of Paul LaViolette whose confusing and widely ignored and self-published work got several chapters. I gave the book 3 stars for its entertainment value and docked it two for not staying on point. This is still a great and fascinating subject. I wish Mr. Schoch thought so too.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2015
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Chongyean Cheang
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
An amazing book
Format: Paperback
Silent Spring by Rachel Carson is one book that has opened our minds to how much has gone wrong in the world. It is an immensely powerful scientific book for general readers packed full of verifiable research and data. Rachel Carson wrote the book about the widespread use of chemical pesticides that have wreaked havoc upon the water, the atmosphere, the soil, and the earth since the experiments conducted during World War II. Carson begins the book with a short chapter containing an imaginary scenario of a quiet American countryside in spring devoid of birds and other wildlife. Carson then asks a question which the book attempts to answer: "What has already silenced the voices of spring in many towns in America?" (Carson 1962) The other sixteen chapters fully detail how the use of chemical pesticides and herbicides impacts the environment and silences living species when people do not pay attention. In chapter two she makes the point that humans can alter nature. "The most alarming of all man's assaults upon the environment is the contamination of air, earth, rivers, and sea" (Carson 1962). The author demonstrates that people try to get a quick fix for their small problems but are often unaware of the consequences of their quick fix solutions. "We use the chemicals to kill weeds, insects, and pests…… They should not call insecticides but biocides" (Carson 1962). In the next chapter, "Elixirs of Death," she introduces chemicals which can harm health such as chlorinated hydrocarbons (e.g., DDT), organic phosphates, and other hydrocarbons that are more toxic than DDT such as dieldrin, Aldrin, and endrin. She tells the story of a child and family dog that was suddenly killed by the use on an endrin cockroach spray. When the chemicals are combined with one another, it leads to an unpredictable and harmful result in the atmosphere and living creatures. Carson continues in chapter 4 and five by describing the effect of pesticides in water and soil. Even though low concentrations of insecticide in the water is not detrimental, a habit of putting poison in water builds up and ends up passing into fishes, animals, and humans. DDD and DDE, the toxaphenes used in clear lakes destroy the human adrenal cortex (Carson 1962). Even though the chemicals had been deposited years ago, it was carried on in living species from generation to generation. Similarly, soil can be destroyed if it contains too many pesticides and these chemicals may remain in the ground for an extended period. The following chapter of the book mentioned that there are ways to avoid using insecticides to kill insects such as introducing different species of plants or by introducing plant-eating insects. Carson continues her analysis of the life-threatening consequences of pesticides on the surroundings in chapters 7, 8 and 9. She mentions that the entire population of living creatures, including birds and fish, was killed in sprayed areas. "Aldrin, one of the deadliest of all chemicals, was chosen to kill the Japanese beetles... After a few reports came in of dead birds everywhere…. Dogs and cats sickened" (Carson 1962). The author also provides excerpts of letters from people who lived in the areas saying that these pesticides changed the landscape of the areas in which they lived. One woman reported that the spraying of these chemicals had wiped out robins, chickadees, and cardinals. Other women from Alabama said the result of fire-ant spraying made the birds disappear overnight. Other people in Mississippi saw no land birds for miles after spraying. The author ends the chapter with the question, "Isn't it possible to help the balance of nature without destroying it? Who has the right to decide about the use of chemicals?" Chapter 10 details the death of wildlife when aerial spraying is conducted. She comments on the lack of precaution and foresight being used by the pesticide industry. "No research was done before the launch of million acres aerial campaign" (Carson 1962). It shows the lack of caution and general unawareness of the consequences of their actions. The following chapter examines the evidence that the widespread use of poisonous substances can cause the slow, prolonged destruction of human health. For example, she mentions, "DDT has been found everywhere in processed food and cooked restaurant meals" (Carson 1962). The cumulative effect of using different chemicals is that it is incorporated into our food. It is unpredictable how much it can cause harm. A huge amount of poison is everywhere; people exist in their day-to-day lives without knowing that it is even there. Carson calls it "the age of poison" (Carson 1962). Chapters 12, 13 and 14, Carson directs examines the chemicals harmful to human tissues and organs. Back in the days, we lived in fear of infectious diseases such as smallpox and cholera. Now, we are living with and facing new diseases that Carson calls "the environmental disease." The author gives many examples of the sources of the chemicals and how it reacts and is incorporated into the body. "Dieldrin can have long-term effects such as loss of memory, insomnia, nightmares, and mania" (Carson 1962). At the end of chapter 14, she mentions the statistic that one in every four Americans is developing cancer. The possible explanation is that the sale of chemicals in the market is an accepted part of our lives. She describes how she was slowly dying of cancer as she finished this book. In the next three chapters, Carson describes how insects have developed the ability to reproduce and resist the effects of the sprays. In other words, like the title of Chapter 15 states, "nature fights back." Finally, the final chapter, "The Other Road" presents alternatives to chemical control of pests. Chemical "solutions" should be stopped. Instead, an alternative way is biological solutions based on knowledge of living organisms. She gives examples such as insect sterilization, insect venom as a poison, insect killing microorganisms, and ultrasonic sound to kill mosquito larvae. "The choice, after all, is ours to make" (Carlson 1962). Overall, Silent Spring is all about how the world has changed because of our misguided actions of using harmful chemical pesticides in nature. The book opens our eyes and minds to the fact that these synthetic pesticides have poisoned all living species, destroyed the environment, and contaminated the world. I would recommend this book to all people that are interested in how much the earth is contaminated by humans and want to find a way to help keep the balance of nature without destroying it.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2018
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Lisa D.
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★★★★★ 5
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Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2026

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