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Product Origin: EU (Turkey)This product is able to be sourced and supplied at excellent prices because of favourable cross border currency conversions. All products are authentic brand names and will include a product information insert in English.Medical Information:Lowering high cholesterol and triglycerides in certain patients. It also increases high-density lipoprotein (HDL "good") cholesterol levels. It is used along with an appropriate diet. It is used in certain patients to slow blood vessel blockage and to reduce the need for medical procedures to open blocked heart blood vessels. It may also be used for other conditions as determined by your doctor.Lescol XL Extended-Release Tablets is an HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor also known as a "statin." It works by reducing the production of certain fatty substances in the body including cholesterol.Fluvastatin is a cholesterol-lowering medication that blocks the production of cholesterol (a type of fat) in the body.Fluvastatin reduces low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and total cholesterol in the blood. Lowering your cholesterol can help prevent heart disease and hardening of the arteries conditions that can lead to heart attack stroke and vascular disease.Increases rate at which body removes cholesterol from blood and reduces production of cholesterol in body by inhibiting enzyme that catalyzes early rate-limiting step in cholesterol synthesis; increases HDL; reduces LDL VLDL and triglycerides.
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About Lescol XL Lescol:
Product Type: Prescription Drugs 10
Lescol XL ( Lescol Generic Fluvastatin )
Lescol XL (Lescol Generic Fluvastatin)
Lescol Generic Fluvastatin
80mg 28 Tablets
Lescol Generic Fluvastatin Lescol XL

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Education on antibiotic prescribing in Quebec worked. Guidelines for Quebec doctors on proper antibiotic use led to a decline in these prescriptions in the province, while prescribing rose in other provinces, a new study suggests.
The guidelines were published and disseminated to Quebec doctors and pharmacists in January 2005 due to worries about the overuse of antibiotics and partly as a response to an outbreak of Clostridium difficile infections.
Antibiotic consumption per capita was already 23.3 per cent higher in Canada generally than in Quebec in 2004, the study showed.
But in the year that followed publication of the guidelines, the number of outpatient antibiotic prescriptions in Quebec decreased 4.2 per cent, the study said, while increasing 6.5 per cent in other Canadian provinces. The trend persisted three years later.


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