Categorized under Cardio & Blood

Trandate (Labetalol)

Trandate (Labetalol)


online pharmacy: minimal price: best buy: shipping: payment method:

delivery to:

GenericMed - - Trandate 100 mg 30 pills - - Trandate 100 mg 90 pills

14/free

masterCard most countries
Tl-Pharmacy $29.99 - 50mg × 30 pills $189.99 - 200mg × 90 pills 10-21 days/free masterCard every country
MedRx-One $39.99 - 50mg × 30 pills $79.99 - 50mg × 90 pills

10 days/free

masterCard most countries
LeadMedic $96.10 - 30 pills x 100 mg $214.65 - 90 pills x 100 mg (+$118.55)

14-21days/$10
5-7 days/$25

masterCard every country
Pharma-Doc - - - - - FedEx next day/$24 masterCard USA only
Med-Pen - - - - -

14-20 days/$10
7-14 days/$20

masterCard most countries
OurPharmacyRx $149.70 - 30 pills x 100 mg $387.90 - 90 pills x 100 mg

14-21 days/$15
5-12 days/$30

masterCard most countries
RxPharms - - - - - -

14-24 days/free

worldwide
RxMedShop - - - - - -

8-16 days/$20
5-9 days/$30
3-6 days/$40

most countries


Trandate (Labetalol)
BEAT HEART DISEASE WITHOUT SURGERY: THE PROTOCOL OF CHELATING PHYSICIANS-TREATMENT MODE
Treatment is carried out on an outpatients basis while the patient is fully dressed and comfortably seated in an easy chair. A fine needle is inserted into a vein, usually in the crook of the arm but sometimes in the hand or other suitable site. The drip of 3g (on average) of EDTA, plus other substances as mentioned above, is attached and will take three to four hours to infuse into the body.
This slow entry into the body is designed to achieve the optimum effect from the infusion with the minimum load on the body’s excretory organs.
Because of its effect on blood sugar levels, patients are advised to eat something as soon as the infusion begins such as a wholewheat sandwich or some fruit, and frequent drinks are provided to keep up fluid levels for excretory purposes. Directors of chelation clinics are well aware of the care which must be taken when giving fluid to people with some forms of hypertension and allowances are always made for this and other personal aspects which may vary from patient to patient.
EDTA has an immediate effect of lowering blood pressure, and as a great proportion of those who come for treatment suffer from high blood pressure (itself a symptom of arterial disease) then immediate relief from this is sometimes felt.
Towards the end of each treatment Vitamin C is added to the solution in the bag as this facilitates the excretion of the unwanted minerals from the arteries as well as acting as a free-radical mopper and a gentle diuretic.
All signs of the chelating substances have disappeared from the body within 24 hours of the treatment; even so, it is not considered good practice to overload excretory organs as they are ridding the body of toxins which have built up over years, hence it is unusual to give more than three treatments per week and two is more normal.
After the first five treatments patients usually begin to notice early benefits which are experienced by the majority of them, including clearer perception and vision – some patients describe it as ‘the head clearing’; an abatement of symptoms associated with high blood pressure (feelings of fullness, tension, ringing in the ears, etc) and a general feeling of more energy and alertness.
However, the main benefits (listed below) are not experienced fully until well after the treatment course is over. Continued improvement is very often noted by patients for at least six months after cessation of infusions.
This raises the question of how often chelation therapy should be repeated, for it is not always a simple question of having one course of treatment and forgetting about it (although this does provide long-term remission of symptoms), but rather of maintenance, keeping in mind that most people who come in for chelation therapy do so at a very advanced stage of arterial degeneration.
What many people do not realize is that there is never a time when we can be free of arterial disease in our lives – or as Dr Perry puts it: ‘There is no cure for arterial disease.’ The process of arterial hardening, by whatever name it is called – arteriosclerosis, atherosclerosis – is an ongoing one which begins in the cradle and ends in the grave.
But Dr Perry asserts it is not so much the arterial hardening that is the problem, but arterial clogging. This is the contemporary affliction which must be addressed – and the sooner, the better.
*34/104/2*

Comments are closed.