Its supposed to reduce the time to recover but the price you might pay
GI tract: Side effects were extremely frequent. Fifty-three percent of patients reported side effects. Very frequent:
Nausea (30%),
constipation (22%), and dry mouth (10%). Frequent: Gastric irritation (7%),
vomiting (5%), and
dyspepsia (2%).
Psychiatric disturbances and
central nervous system (CNS): Altogether 51 percent of patients were affected. Very frequent: Sleep disturbances (
somnolence 18%,
insomnia 11%),
vertigo (27%), and
depression (13%). Frequent:
dyskinesia (4%) and
hallucinations (4%).
Cardiovascular: Approximately 30 percent of patients experienced side effects. Most frequent were hypotension (10%), peripheral
edema (14%) and non-specific edema (2%).
Arrhythmias were encountered in 4.8%,
palpitations in 4.3%, and
angina pectoris in 1.4%.
That is if it don't just plain kill you:
Valvular heart disease[edit]
In two studies published in the
New England Journal of Medicine on January 4, 2007, cabergoline was implicated along with
pergolide in causing
valvular heart disease.
[12][13] As a result of this, the
FDA removed pergolide from the U.S. market on March 29, 2007.
[14] Since cabergoline is not approved in the U.S. for Parkinson's Disease, but for hyperprolactinemia, the drug remains on the market. The lower doses required for treatment of hyperprolactinemia have been found to be not associated with clinically significant valvular heart disease or cardiac valve regurgitation.
[15][16]
So there you are ready to go in minutes, all constipated, tired from lack of sleep, and the old ticker is having issues, sounds like great fun.
Let us know how it works out.
I think I'll just wait my 30 minutes, you know grab a bite to eat between her legs while I wait.