This patient support community is for discussions relating to angina, angioplasty, arrhythmia, bypass surgery, cardiomyopathy, coronary artery disease, defibrillator, heart attack, heart disease, high blood pressure, mitral valve, pacemaker, PAD, stenosis, and stress tests.
Boy howdy do you lead a stressful life......I do not see how you do it without lots of help. Congrats to you for keeping things going.
As you know, Lisinopril is an angiotension converting enzyme inhibitor or ACEi. I have taken Altace which is also an ACEi for over 5 years. I think the worst or most frequent side effect of this class of medicine is that a cough develops that causes you to have to stop the med. It is an allergic reaction. Other than this side affect, I think these are probably the best heart meds for not causing side effects.
All beta blockers cause fatigue, exercise intolerance, and lethargy to some extent. We are all unique, so it depends on the dosage and the strength/conditioning of our hearts and bodies. Beta blockers limit how fast and how forceful the contraction of our heart is. They actually reduce blood circulation in our extremities because there is less output from our heart. BUT they save more lives than any other heart med for those of us with damage to our hearts. They should not be used for BP control, even though they do an excellent job at it. There are too many side effects associated with them.
You are a young person with much more energy than an old post mi patient like myself. I have Diastolic Heart Failure caused by CAD. BUT I remember when I started beta blockers before the mi. I think that I was 48 (8 years ago). My doctor started me on it due to rapid heart beat (tachycardia) and high blood pressure. Boy it sucked the energy right out of me! I hated it. I lost a lot of weight and abruptly stopped it (I thought I didn't need it anymore), which is a NO NO! But I didn't know though....2 months later I had an mi and stroke.
So, I can tell you that the likelihood that Coreg is energy draining and Lisinopril is probably not, is high. This is just from my experience.
You can beat this cardiomyopathy for sure! It happens all of the time.
G-d Bless,
Jack
Let me tell you something about Bystolic. It is wonderful! It lowered my blood pressure and it didn't cause any major side effects.
I was on Atenonol (sp?) and I had the worse side effects from taking it. I only took it for 2 weeks until I couldn't take it anymore! I was tired and looked tired too and I had no energy at all. I felt like my mind wasn't with it too - a spacey like feeling - that was weird.
Anyway, I would recommend asking your doctor about Bystolic. I would recommend it to anyone that has to take a beta-blocker.
Carmen
Jack
I take lots of fast acting nitro for angina. Oh yeah, my mouse didn't "feel" off the desk, it fell off the desk, lol. It really takes the wind out of you when you lose a large post....
I took Atenolol for over 5 years until I developed drug induced Lupus. There are many drugs that are capable of this. That is when my cardiologist switched me to Coreg CR. Since then my angina has been much better and I like Coreg for the alpha blocker it has. It is the number 1 recommended beta blocker for heart failure. Yest I cannot take the weight gain, which is a side effect that a high percentage of people who take it have gained lots of weight.
You can go to "ask a patient".com and look up what people have written about side effects of many, many drugs. Bystolic is not listed. It is fairly new in the US, but has been approved for use in Europe for quite some time.
I read your post about taking Cardizem LA, which you know is a calcium ion cellular influx inhibitor (slow channel blocker or calcium antagonist). I read of all the possible side affects and the most serious as I see, is taking it along with a beta blocker. That is contraindicated. I would also watch for arrhythmias.
My wife takes Lisinopril, a long-acting angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEi), and Norvasc, a long-acting calcium channel blocker (CCB). She is fine except for some swelling