Drugs Online » Prescription Drugs 14 » Sanolip Orlistat
Orlistat (prescription and nonprescription) is used with an individualized low-calorie low-fat diet and exercise program to help people lose weight. Prescription orlistat is used in overweight people who may also have high blood pressure diabetes high cholesterol or heart disease. Orlistat is also used after weight-loss to help people keep from gaining back that weight. Orlistat is in a class of medications called lipase inhibitors. It works by preventing some of the fat in foods eaten from being absorbed in the intestines. This unabsorbed fat is then removed from the body in the stool.
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About Sanolip Orlistat:
Product Type: Prescription Drugs 14
Sanolip (Orlistat Vyfat Generic Orlistat)
Sanolip (Orlistat Vyfat Generic Orlistat)
Vyfat Generic Orlistat
120mg
Orlistat Vyfat Generic Orlistat Sanolip

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From Gulf News: Runners should avoid prescription drugs. Statins may increase production of the enzyme creatine kinase, and hence heighten chances of muscle damage in athletes. Marathon running has increased in popularity over the past three decades, with participation in the United States rising from 25,000 runners in 1976 to nearly 470,000 in 2008. Many professional and recreational runners take prescription drugs, unaware of potential side-effects that affect runners in particular. One such class of drugs, called statins, which includes medicines such as Lipitor, Crestor and Pravachol, lowers blood cholesterol by inhibiting a cholesterol-producing enzyme and may even lower the risks of heart attack and further cardiovascular disease in a narrow category of patients. A new study forthcoming in the American Journal of Cardiology examined the effect of statins on creatine kinase (CK), an enzyme linked to muscle damage. Elevated levels of CK in the blood and muscle after exercise correlates with muscle damage. The study, conducted by Dr Beth Parker of the Henry Low Heart Centre at Connecticut's Hartford Hospital, is the first to measure CK levels in athletes taking statins after physical activity in a real-life environment rather than in a university laboratory.


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