Lotensin (Benazepril)
Lotensin (Benazepril)
delivery to: 14/free 10 days/free 14-21days/$10 14-20 days/$10 14-21 days/$15 14-24 days/free 8-16 days/$20
online pharmacy:
minimal price:
best buy:
shipping:
payment method:
GenericMed
$38.34 - Lotensin 5 mg (Low Dosage) 60 pills
$44.20 - Lotensin 5 mg (Low Dosage) 90 pills
most countries
Tl-Pharmacy
$33.84 - 10mg × 30 pills
$89.00 - 10mg × 90 pills
10-21 days/free
every country
MedRx-One
$43.84 - 10mg × 30 pills
$135.00 - 5mg × 180 pills
most countries
LeadMedic
$41.50 - 60 pills x 5 mg
$47.84 - 90 pills x 5 mg (+$6.34)
5-7 days/$25
every country
Pharma-Doc
- - -
- -
FedEx next day/$24
USA only
Med-Pen
$22.20 - Lotensin
(generic)
10mg * 10 pills
$81.01 - Lotensin
(generic)
5mg * 120 pills
7-14 days/$20
most countries
OurPharmacyRx
$24.00 - 30 pills x 5 mg
$58.50 - 90 pills x 5 mg
5-12 days/$30
most countries
RxPharms
- - -
- - -
worldwide
RxMedShop
- - -
- - -
5-9 days/$30
3-6 days/$40
most countries
.gif)
A USER’S GUIDE OF YOUR HEART: CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIAS
While ventricular fibrillation remains the most deadly of the heart’s erratic beats, other abnormal beating patterns can cause anxiety, pain, and even death. Doctors refer to a faster than normal heartbeat as tachycardia, while an abnormally slow beat is bradycardia. In both instances, the rhythm of the heartbeat may be perfectly regular, with only the rate affected. Most often such disturbances are perfectly harmless. We call them palpitations when we sense them ourselves.
At other times, the rhythm of your heart is a problem as well. For example, the upper chambers of your heart may be beating at 200 to 300 beats per minute, but the electrical message might not make its way down to the lower chambers, and thus the ventricles beat at a much slower pace. This is called atrial flutter.
Some patients experience a phenomenon in which the top two chambers increase their rate to from 300 to 500 beats per minute while the lower chambers can’t keep up and develop irregular beats. This is termed atrial fibrillation.
The most common, and most harmless, arrhythmia is what we commonly call a skipped beat, more technically termed a premature ventricular contraction or “PVC”. Every child has experienced this while walking past a cemetery or down into a dark cellar. Occasionally PVCs are linked together. Two in a row and you have a couplet, three in a row are called a triplet. Still, in most cases, these are harmless and usually no medication is prescribed. Deep breathing exercises often are helpful in controlling PVCs, which are more worrisome than dangerous.
The harmless types of arrhythmias are called benign while dangerous ones are malignant. Fortunately most are in the first category. However, be certain to report them to your doctor along with information as to when they occurred and what the circumstances might have been.
Following bypass and other types of heart surgery, the heart’s muscle is a bit irritable and jittery. That’s understandable when you think of what’s happened to it. So it should come as no surprise that virtually all surgery patients experience quite a few benign arrhythmias.
If arrhythmias continue to be a problem, your doctor may wish to equip you with a Holler monitor. In this way you’re wired with chest electrodes that lead to a portable electrocardiograph the size of a large personal stereo which keeps a 24-hour record of every beat your heart takes. You fill in a diary of the activities you engage in during that time, and your doctor can compare the ECG tracing with your journal.
For those arrhythmias that just don’t go away on their own, especially following surgery, there are many anti-arrhythmic drugs at your doctor’s disposal, including beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, and digitalis.
*28/85/2*

