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Carvedilol: An antihypertensive and antianginal agent, also used in congestive heart failure.
Source: Stedman's Medical Spellchecker, © 2006 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. All rights reserved.
Carvedilol: beta blocker that can reduce the progression of heart failure in individuals whose disease is not advanced.
Source: WordNet 2.1
Carvedilol: A synthetic antihypertensive methoxyphenoxy- 2-propanol derivative with no intrinsic sympathomimetic activity, Carvedilol acts as a nonselective beta-adrenoceptor blocking agent (S(-) enantiomer) and as an alpha 1-adrenoceptor blocker (R(+) and S(-) enantiomers). Its acts more strongly on beta-receptors than on alpha 1-receptors, reduces peripheral vascular resistance by vasodilation, and prevents reflex tachycardia (beta-blockade) so that heart rate is either unchanged or decreased. Carvedilol also reduces renin release through beta-blockade. (NCI04)
Source: Diseases Database
These medical condition or symptom topics may be relevant to medical information for Carvedilol:
Because many drug names share similar spellings or sound almost identical when spoken, it is possible to mistake the name of a particular medication. Other drugs that are sometimes confused with Carvedilol include:
Source - WordNet 2.1
Source: CRISP
The following list attempts to classify Carvedilol into categories where each line is subset of the next.
Source: WordNet 2.1
Source: Diseases Database
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