Equestrian Issues
Getting thrushbuster under your nails = paaiiiiinnnnnnnn
seen from Germany

seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Canada
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Estonia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
Equestrian Issues
Getting thrushbuster under your nails = paaiiiiinnnnnnnn
I'm having such a bad nice. I feel like my brain isn't attached to my body. I can't focus at all. I've become scared of taken medication - it's a hard drug, does it have any life-threatening correlations? Like, can it cause problems after long use?
What medication are you taking? There are always dangers to any medication, regardless of what you're taking. If you're concerned about long-term use, you should talk to your doctor or your pharmacist (or both!) about your concerns.
I have seen studies that indicate that the primary problem with long-term use is the possibility that the medication will stop working and you'll have to up the dose and eventually you won't be able to raise it any higher. If that happens, you would have to start trying other medications until you found something else that works as well as the first one did. However, that kind of thing doesn't usually happen for a very long time.
All medications have possible side effects, but the likelihood of having those side effects does not (to my knowledge) go up over time; typically side effects decrease as your body gets used to the medication being in your system. I did have a friend once who had to stop taking the medication they were on because they were at the highest dose and it was making their heart do weird things, but they'd been on that medication and slowly upping the dose for well over ten years (probably way closer to twenty years) at that point. I don't remember if they started on something else or if they are medication-free at this point.
I definitely encourage you to talk to your pharmacist about your concerns. You can also look up your medication at http://drugs.com and see what the common side effects are.