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Change (lower) in BP after changing pharmacy?

Heart & Blood Health | Last Active: Sep 10 8:48am | Replies (15)

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Good thinking, and thanks for adding your voice. You may be correct, and I think the asker should carefully consider what you say.
Incidentally, I don't think I inferred that the university chemist would 'go to bat' for this person, only that he/she might be persuaded to perform an analysis. If he's a prof, he might give the project to a grad student, although if it's a simple matter of titration, that could be done by a second year student reliably.

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Replies to "Good thinking, and thanks for adding your voice. You may be correct, and I think the..."

You have only one tablet so why waste it like that. Find out the active ingredient and how to check for that. The old supply was working great. The new stuff was too strong so which one is correct? You have plenty of supply of the new supply. Take the empty bottle to the old pharmacy as they should should have a record of lot # for the bottle that they filled. Talk to new pharmacy and ask why their product seems to be too strong. Could be their stuff is in error.

Go here to enter the "pill" info and get addtional details.
https://www.drugs.com/imprints.php