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To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu Title: Dosages in Combination Therapy Not Related to Number of Medications for Heart Failure: Presented at HF |
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"Dosages in Combination Therapy Not Related to Number of Medications for Heart Failure: Presented at HF" By Paula Moyer HELSINKI, FINLAND -- June 22, 2006 -- The number of medications a patient with heart failure receives does not influence the dosages of any of the drugs, according to a study presented here at the Heart Failure Congress of the European Society of Cardiology (HF). These findings are reassuring because they suggest there is little if any drug-drug interaction among these drugs, the investigators reported in a presentation on June 19[th. Therefore, physicians can adjust the dosages for maximum control of heart failure rather than to bypass toxicities, said principal investigator Patrick Assyag, MD, consultant cardiologist, Saint Antoine Hospital, Paris, France. He and his co-investigators wanted to know how many medications physicians were using to treat patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction, and whether combination therapy was affecting the dosages used for such drugs. |
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