It looks like you’re referring to a list of medicines, but your message is cut off (“see more…”), so I’m not sure what you want to know about them.
The drugs you mentioned—pregabalin, gabapentin, propranolol, rivaroxaban, tramadol, venlafaxine, and warfarin—are all legitimate prescription medications, but they belong to very different categories, for example:
- Pregabalin / Gabapentin → nerve pain, seizures, anxiety (neuropathic agents / anticonvulsants)
- Propranolol → blood pressure, anxiety, heart rhythm (beta-blocker)
- Rivaroxaban / Warfarin → blood thinners (anticoagulants)
- Tramadol → pain relief (opioid-like analgesic)
- Venlafaxine → antidepressant (SNRI)
If you’re seeing them on a “list,” it could be for a few reasons depending on context:
- Controlled or prescription-only medication lists (common in pharmacy regulations)
- Drug interaction or safety warnings
- Workplace or driving fitness guidelines
- Import/export or customs restrictions in some countries
- Abuse/misuse monitoring lists (some of these have dependence risk)
But the meaning changes a lot depending on where the list came from.
If you paste the full list or tell me where you saw it (a website, document, country rule, etc.), I can explain exactly why those medicines are included.
