The effects of some drugs can change if you take other drugs or herbal products at the same time. This can increase your risk for serious side effects or may cause your medications not to work correctly. These drug interactions are possible, but do not always occur. Your doctor or pharmacist can often prevent or manage interactions by changing how you use your medications or by close monitoring.
To help your doctor...
Read moreMany patients with chronic pain use the so-called non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), including the COX-2 selective Celebrex. ... Read more »
Not so long ago I wrote about a study showing that exposure to aspirin is associated with a reduction in the risk for developing clinical... Read more »
Source: First DataBank
Generic Name: AMPHETAMINE/DEXTROAMPHETAMINE - ORAL Pronounced: (am-FET-a-meen/DEX-troe-am-FET-a-meen) Interactions Your healthcare professionals... Read more »
Surveys suggest that about 60 percent of people over age 65 take aspirin every day for ailments ranging from arthritis to heart disease. And if... Read more »
Dutch scientists have found an increased rate of tiny bleeding episodes in the brain in people who regularly take aspirin. Researchers looked at MRI... Read more »
According to new research, combining the clot-preventing drug Plavix with aspirin is an effective substitute treatment for people at high risk of... Read more »
Amid the continuing debate over who should pop an aspirin each day to fight heart disease, and at what dose, U.S. experts have revised guidelines... Read more »