Taking prednisone with a heart murmur can pose potential risks, as prednisone is a corticosteroid that can affect fluid retention, blood pressure, and electrolyte balance. These changes may exacerbate underlying heart conditions or complicate existing murmurs. It's crucial to consult a healthcare professional before starting prednisone to assess any potential interactions or complications related to your heart murmur. Regular monitoring may be necessary to ensure heart health is maintained.
yes because illegal drugs can cause heart defects contributing to a heart murmur.
Motrin
Yes! Cocaine has a direct affect on the walls of the heart and restriction of blood flow.
Bien fack no
A heart murmur can go away, but if its abnormal, probably not. Innocent heart murmurs tend to go away after awhile, but it may take a few years. Or it won't go away at all
Dangerous combination, it may screw with your heart big time. I've got a hearth murmur and have taken extasy pills and mdma and had no trouble. hearth murmur isn't really that serious of a condition, well not in my my case any way doesn't affect me in the slightest. i dunno bout you though. But if it doesnt effect you, then i doubt it will make things any worse. but im no doctor lol
CAN YOU TAKE PREDNISONE WHEN TAKING TIKOSYN
can you take Viagra while taken prednisone
is it ok to take prednisone with oj
no
Yes at times they can interfer with heart murmur. This can be an especialy big problem for children with heart murmurs. The type of the murmur needs to be evaluated by a doctor to see if the patient should take adderall. For adults heart murmurs are much less of a worry high blood pressure is what you want to watch in adults.
Back-flow of blood through heart valves is known as a heart murmur; for example, mitral regurgitation refers to a faulty mitral heart valve that allows blood to push back through the partly open valve. Many people have mild heart murmurs. Most are known as a "functional murmur" and cause no major symptoms, nor cause for concern. These persons must take antibiotics before teeth cleaning or extraction because of the risk of further heart damage IF a blood infection would occur as a result of the dental procedure. Otherwise, most patients with a mitral valve murmur are healthy and it has little effect on activities or health. Heart murmurs are "staged", meaning they are assigned a degree of severity. A doctor ausculates (listens) to the heart for sounds characteristic of murmur. A normal heart with no murmur causes a "lub- dub" sound in 2 distinct beats. But in a heart murmur, the sound is more 'slurred', as a lub---dubbb, with a longer version of the second sound. The characteristic of heart murmur is a distinct "swoosh" in the heart beat. Since blood "back washes" in a murmur, it is like making the heart work doubly hard: the first effort is when the heart pushes the blood through the valve the first time, then the second effort occurs when the heart must take that remaning blood (combined always with new blood being dumped into the chamber) and push it through the same valve a second time. A normal valve closes completely, similar to how a rubber band snaps back to a smaller size when stretched and let go, except a heart valve should close completely between heart beats. If the heart valve is very flabby (such as in an obese person), or if the person has a severe murmur or a second murmur, exercise and exertion can cause work that the heart cannot tolerate since demands on the heart increase during activity. Typically the person may feel extra tired, feel dizzy, or even faint from a severe heart murmur.