Guest
Guest
Apr 27, 2026
12:44 AM
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Tadalista CT 20 with others. It is a prescription medicine (tadalafil 20 mg) and is meant to be used only by the person it was prescribed to, after a medical evaluation. Sharing it can be risky because the safety of tadalafil depends heavily on a person’s heart health, blood pressure, other medications, and underlying conditions. People who should not take (or be given) Tadalista CT 20 include: Anyone taking nitrates (e.g., nitroglycerin, isosorbide) for chest pain — the combination can cause a dangerous drop in blood pressure People using riociguat (for pulmonary hypertension) Those with serious heart conditions, such as unstable angina or recent heart attack People who recently had a stroke or have severe cardiovascular disease Individuals with very low blood pressure or uncontrolled hypertension Patients with severe liver or kidney disease (dose adjustment or avoidance may be needed) Those allergicTadalista CT 20 to tadalafil or similar medicines People for whom sexual activity is medically unsafe (as advised by a doctor) Children and adolescents (not indicated at all) Why sharing is unsafe Even if someone “feels similar symptoms,” erectile dysfunction medicines like Tadalista CT 20 are not one-size-fits-all. A dose that is safe for one person can cause serious side effects—like fainting, heart strain, or dangerously low blood pressure—in another. If someone else thinks they need it, they should get their own medical advice and prescription rather than using someone else’s supply.
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