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Women's Sexual Health

Lady Era with liver impairment: dosing and safety

The liver is the main site of metabolism for many medications including Lady Era (Sildenafil Citrate). Liver impairment slows clearance and can raise plasma levels of Sildenafil Citrate above the intended range, amplifying side effects. People with chronic liver disease, recent hepatitis or significantly raised liver enzymes need a tailored approach to Lady Era at 100mg.

Why liver function matters

Sildenafil Citrate undergoes hepatic metabolism through CYP enzymes for many medications. Reduced hepatic function slows this metabolism, prolongs the half-life and raises plasma concentrations. Sildenafil citrate inhibits PDE5, allowing cGMP to accumulate in vascular smooth muscle during sexual arousal. The prescribing information typically classifies severity by Child-Pugh score (A mild, B moderate, C severe) and gives dose adjustments accordingly.

Practical guidance

According to the prescribing information for Sildenafil Citrate, baseline liver function tests are recommended before starting Lady Era in any patient with risk factors and periodically during treatment in chronic liver disease. Severe impairment (Child-Pugh C) often contraindicates Lady Era or requires substantial dose reduction; mild impairment usually permits standard 100mg with closer monitoring.

Frequently asked questions

Is Lady Era safe with liver problems?

Mild liver impairment typically allows Lady Era at standard or slightly reduced 100mg with monitoring. Moderate-to-severe impairment often requires substantial dose reduction. Severe (Child-Pugh C) impairment may contraindicate Lady Era entirely.

Will Lady Era damage my liver?

Most Women's Sexual Health medications at standard 100mg doses do not harm a healthy liver. A small subset can produce drug-induced liver injury in susceptible patients, usually detected by routine ALT/AST monitoring. The prescribing information for Sildenafil Citrate lists the documented risk.

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The information on this website is provided for reference and educational purposes only. It does not replace consultation with a qualified healthcare professional.