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Generic Norvasc (Amlodipine, Norvasc® equivalent)
Amlodipine is in a class of medications called calcium channel blockers. Amlodipine widens the blood vessels, making it easier for the heart to pump and reducing its workload. Amlodipine is used to treat hypertension (high blood pressure) and to treat angina (chest pain). Amlodipine may also be used for purposes other than those listed in this medication guide.
This product will arrive to you in 14-24 business days (free shipping worldwide)
10mg
| Quantity | Price | Price per pill | Returning customer price | Bonus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | € 33.37 | € 3.34 | € 29.82 | ---- | Add to cart |
| 20 | € 35.50 | € 1.78 | € 31.95 | ---- | Add to cart |
| 30 | € 37.63 | € 1.25 | € 33.37 | ---- | Add to cart |
Drug Medical Information
FIGHTING THE FREE-RADICAL FOE POWER UP WITH VITAMINS: DON'T GIVE UP YET
While self-manufactured and food-derived anti-oxidant systems may be sufficient to fend off free radical attack until we reach middlescence, from then on we need supplemental help. More so, depending upon how badly we've abused our bodies (by smoking, drinking, eating junk foods, taking drugs). Even under the best of circumstances, our natural store house of anti-oxidants is sure to decline by the time we've reached middle age.
Sooner or later - the sooner the better - we must locate a reliable source of nutritional supplementation. Once we are unable to replenish all that we require from food sources, we have no other choice.
What a drag! Read the vitamin ads, and you'll be further confused. Each manufacturer claims to be the most honest purveyors of nutritional supplements. Advertisements promise "guaranteed potency", "purity", "high quality", "free of fillers and additives."
Notice none mention impurities. As Dr. Harry Demopoulos, an acknowledged expert on free-radical pathology points out, there is no way of telling what contaminants have been used while turning many of the cheaper vitamins - (mass market, off-brand products) into tablets or capsules.
"Tree saps and gums may be added to hold the tablets together; shellac to coat the pills; talc and sand for stretchers or fillers. Worst of all, soaps and detergents such as magnesium stearate are often added as lubricants to help move the powders through the encapsulating and tableting machines in the factory," he writes.
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