2. Can cardiac patients take omeprazole? Omeprazole is generally safe for most cardiac patients. However, it's important for patients with heart conditions
2. Can cardiac patients take omeprazole? Omeprazole is generally safe for most cardiac patients. However, it's important for patients with heart conditions to
SLMHC Cardiac Education Rehabilitation Patient Education Workbook Cardiac Education Rehabilitation
Specific recommendations regarding sildenafil (Viagra) and the cardiac patient are summarized in the following Table. ACE inhibitors, calcium
Effects of VIAGRA on Cardiac Parameters. Single oral doses of sildenafil up to 100 mg produced no clinically relevant changes in the ECGs of normal male volunteers. There is a potential for cardiac risk of sexual activity in patients with preexisting cardiovascular disease. Therefore, treatments for erectile dysfunction, including VIAGRA
SLMHC Cardiac Education Rehabilitation Patient Education Workbook Cardiac Education Rehabilitation
Specific recommendations regarding sildenafil (Viagra) and the cardiac patient are summarized in the following Table. ACE inhibitors, calcium
Risks to Patients with Serious Cardiac Disease: Avoid use in patients with known structural cardiac abnormalities, cardiomyopathy, serious cardiac arrhythmias, coronary artery
WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS. Risks to Patients with Serious Cardiac Disease: Avoid use in patients with known structural cardiac abnormalities.
Comments
To the commenter (Sex4lf57?) who said that Viagra doesn't work this way, I'll toss at least a cautionary comment or two.
Viagra is derived from a medication (sildenafil citrate) that was originally designed for cardiac patients. To prevent stress on the heart (that can cause a heart attack), the chemical causes the capillaries in the body to open as wide as possible, allowing the blood to flow freely with less pressure being applied by the heart.
As such, it also opens the capillaries in the corpus cavernosum of the penis, which leads to an erection. Now, there's a 'valve' that limits blood flow to the penis, so as to allow urinary function, without urine being able to seep into the passages where sperm travels. When a guy urinates, the semen passages are cut off - and when he is erect, the urinary tract is cut off, because the urethra (tube in the penis) does double duty.
When there is sufficient erotic stimulus to cause that 'valve' to switch the seminal tract to 'open', it also opens the sphincters that control blood flow to the penis, so that the capillaries can inflate completely.
During the years (nearly 60) that sildenafil citrate has been in use in cardiac patients (under another drug-name), it was noticed that when a patient was taking the drug, he was more susceptible (at an older age) to more-solid erections. Gradually, the doctors prescribing the drug got 'field reports' from their patients, and forwarded them to the company that makes the drug. Its use as an ED drug is secondary, and took a long time for FDA approval to market such a drug to non-cardiac patients.
When the person taking the drug is in their late teens or early 20's, and has a quite healthy circulatory system - and is around a near-continual erotic stimulus, as is the main character in this story - the effect CAN be a near-perpetual erection. Even the attempts to diminish it by masturbation won't necessarily cause it to go down, when there is a hotly-desired woman present and making subtle erotic comments to the male.
Seriously if you can't get it up enough for jacking to porn, you need more medical than Viagra.