A 35-year-old member asked:
Is lisinopril a ccb?
3 doctor answers • 7 doctors weighed in

Dr. Catherine Willneranswered
Neurology 36 years experience
Lisinopril: Ace (angiotensin converting enzyme) inhibitor. I assume you mean calcium channel blocker by term ccb, but if not, apologies. You can search for 'mechanism of action' with almost any drug.
4.7k viewsReviewed >2 years ago

Dr. Robert Killiananswered
General Practice 29 years experience
Medication Classes: Nope. It is a ace. It is not a calcium channel blocker.
4.7k viewsReviewed >2 years ago

Dr. Jack Rubinanswered
Nephrology and Dialysis 49 years experience
Lisinopril: Lisinopril is a member of the angiotensn converting enzyme inhibitor (ace-i) class of drugs. It is not related to the calcium channel blocker class of antihypertensive agents.
4.7k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
Similar questions
A 36-year-old member asked:
What is lisinopril?
1 doctor answer • 1 doctor weighed in

Dr. Calvin Weisbergeranswered
52 years experience
Lisinopril: the drug is an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor. It is used for hypertension and also congestive heart failure
3.6k viewsAnswered >2 years ago
Last updated Nov 27, 2020
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