Article Categories
» Arts & Entertainment
» Automotive
» Business
» Careers & Jobs
» Education & Reference
» Finance
» Food & Drink
» Health & Fitness
» Home & Family
» Internet & Online Businesses
» Miscellaneous
» Self Improvement
» Shopping
» Society & News
» Sports & Recreation
» Technology
» Travel & Leisure
» Writing & Speaking

  Listed Article

Reprint this article 
  Category: Articles » Health & Fitness » Article
 

Mixing Heart Drugs Can Be Fatal For Some!


By Ng Peng Hock


A standard combination of diuretics and blood-pressure drugs has been prescribed to heart-failure patients by their doctors. Such treatment has widely been used in United States following a research conducted in 1999 reporting that the medicines reduced deaths by 30 percent from heart failure. The said research excluded patients with damaged kidneys or other risk of developing high potassium levels.

Nevertheless, giving such treatment without careful screening may cause thousands of deaths a year. This is the finding of a report published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2004.

According to the researchers, some doctors have not been examining their patients carefully before giving them drugs such as GD Searle's Aldactone, which reduces fluid retention, along with drugs to lower blood pressure such as Bristol-Myers Squibb Co's Capoten or King Pharmaceuticals' Altace. As a result, there are more than 37,000 hospitalizations because of high potassium levels and 4,200 deaths a year in United States.

Most cardiologists admitted that they do need to use these drugs but they have to use them carefully. In other words, they have to make sure they are treating the right people.

Aldactone originally sold by Pfizer's Searle unit and is now available in generic version as spironolactone. Its function is to siphon extra fluid from the body.

Heart drugs such as Capoten, Altace, Pfizer's Accupril, and Biovail Corp's Vasotec, called, ACE inhibitors and sold in less expensive generic forms, reduce blood pressure and generate more than US$1 billion in annual United States sales.

In 2003, Pfizer won United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for Inspra, an improved version of spironolactone. But the sales have been sluggish at US$1 million in the second quarter of 2004.

The officials from the drug manufacturers defended themselves by emphasizing that if the doctors can follow prescribing or label directions for their drugs, the benefits clearly outweigh the risk.

Nevertheless, not all patients will benefit from a standard combination of drugs because people will respond differently even to the same combination of drugs. As a patient, you should pay attention and monitor carefully yourself. Consult your doctor if you feel uncomfortable after taking medicines prescribed by your doctor.

The best possible way to avoid such mishap, I believe, is to maintain your body and heart healthy by adopting a heart-healthy lifestyle while you are still healthy. In this way, you may be able to stay away from taking drugs as long as you can.

America's Most Trusted Doctor Reveals ... How to Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease - Without Drugs or Surgery. Read more about his confession at: http://www.howtopreventheartdisease.com/heart-disease-prevention-dr-robert-article.html
 
 
About the Author
Feel free to use this article on your website or ezine as long as the following information about author/website is included.

Heart Disease Prevention - 8 Simple Ways You Can Do Immediately, Go to: http://www.howtopreventheartdisease.com


Article Source: http://www.simplysearch4it.com/author-articles/6551/1.html
 
If you wish to add the above article to your website or newsletters then please include the "Article Source: http://www.simplysearch4it.com/author-articles/6551/1.html" as shown above and make it hyperlinked.



  Some other articles by Ng Peng Hock
The Risk Of Drug-coated Stents Can Be Managed
Despite the recent negative news that patients with drug-coated stents have higher risk of blood clots than those with bare metal stents, a pioneer of the drug-coated stent has said that ...

What So Great About GL Diet?
GL stands for glycemic load. It is believed by many health professionals that low GL diet will be more popular than low-fat, low-carbohydrate (carb) or low-calorie. The low-fat and ...

Does Salt Matter Your Heart Health?
We add salt into our food to make it tasty. Occasionally, we also put salt into our mouth if we have ulcer because it can make the ulcer healed faster. In older time ...

What Are Designer Eggs Related To Heart Disease?
We all have heard about designer fashions, designer watches, or designer bags. But, have you heard about designer eggs? When you shop around supermarkets, you will probably ...

What If You Have A Fatty Liver?
A fatty liver is one that has build-up of fat in the liver. It may not cause any harm to the liver, if mild. ...

Does Heart Grow Older With Age?
Your age does not determine how young or old your heart really is. A heart of a 40-year-old person may have the vitality of a ...

  
  Recent Articles
Hypnosis – 5 WONDERFUL Steps to Quit Smoking Today for a HEALTHY Living
by pradeep aggarwal

Detox and You: What Have You Heard?
by Dr. Robert Fleishmann

The Importance of Foods to fight Cold Sores
by Robert H Black

Health Hazards of Smoking
by Mason Parkers

The Benefits of Cleansing Your Body
by Dr. Robert Fleishmann

The Risk Of Drug-coated Stents Can Be Managed
by Ng Peng Hock

What So Great About GL Diet?
by Ng Peng Hock

Does Salt Matter Your Heart Health?
by Ng Peng Hock

Building Up Strong and Shapely Legs
by Ismael D. Tabije

Asthma Children Can Be Cured
by Ian McAllister

Nosebleeds - Bloody Nose - The simple facts and the cures
by Robert W. Benjamin

Your Great Goal in Life A Healthy and Fit YOU
by Ismael D. Tabije