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Generic Zocor (Simvastatin, Zocor® equivalent)
Zocor (simvastatin) is used along with an overall diet plan in order to reduce high blood cholesterol levels. Zocor can significantly reduce the amount of LDL ("bad") cholesterol in the blood while simultaneously raising the levels of HDL-C ("good") cholesterol. Zocor may also be prescribed for other reasons. It has been proven to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke in high-risk patients such as diabetics or heart patients, regardless of their blood cholesterol levels.
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20mg
| Quantity | Price | Price per pill | Returning customer price | Bonus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 90 | € 70.29 | € 0.78 | € 63.19 | ---- | Add to cart |
Drug Medical Information
CLEANING UP YOUR ACT: THE HIDDEN HAZARD - LEAD
Conventional wisdom has it that lead in the home is primarily an inner city problem, with underprivileged children the main victims of lead-based paint flaking off walls.
That was until they found it in the White House when Millie, the First Family's dog, fell sick with lead poisoning. When Barbara, George and the dog all came down with some form of auto-immune disease, the White House physicians said the chances of that being a coincidence was less than one in 20 million.
"It's a terrible thing," President Bush said, noting the renowned English springer had gotten ill from licking flaking paint off her toes.
Less than one year later, a second shocker. High levels of lead were found in the Vice President's home. The testing was ordered after doctors remembered who the former residents of the century-old mansion were: the Bushes.
There's a world of difference between the ghetto and the White house, but not when the issue is lead contamination. Among the hidden hazards in the average home: lead in the water (from pipes), lead on the dinner plates (from ceramic glazed dishware), lead in the food (from cans), lead on the walls (from household dust and lead-based paints) - there's even lead in your wine (from the lead foil capsules that cover the bottle's rim and cork).
Discouraging? And how. There is no such thing as a 'safe' level of lead. Even very low levels, once thought to be harmless, are proving toxic. More discouraging still is the oft-repeated emphasis on lead being chiefly a growing child's health problem, blamed for all manner of problems from learning deficits to delinquency.
All probably true. But what about the post-puberty crowd? Why soft-pedal the news that as we grow older, lead does more, not less, harm. We've known about the poisonous effects of lead since the days of the Roman Empire. Since then, evidence is mounting that its effects are more subtle, wide-ranging and long-lasting than anyone suspected. Not only does lead decrease IQ by several points in the developing child, but in adults it affects reaction time, psychomotor performance, electrophysiological measures such as EEG patterns, potential and peripheral nerve conduction, all in a way that suggests a dose-response ratio. Heavy lead exposure is correlated with cardiovascular disease; modest exposure is linked to high blood pressure.
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