Your doctor or pharmacist may already be aware of any possible drug interactions and may be monitoring you for them. Do not start, stop, or change the dosage of any medicine before checking with your doctor or pharmacist first.
Taking certain medications with this product could result in serious (rarely fatal) drug interactions. Avoid taking MAO inhibitors (e.g., furazolidone, isocarboxazid, linezolid, moclobemide,...
Read moreIn part one of this series on weight gain and antidepressants we talked about which medications are most likely to make you gain weight. ... Read more »
Today we have even more bad news in two separate studies about the diabetes drug Avandia. With the bad news we get all the time about... Read more »
There are a lot of potential reasons why a child with ADHD might not gain weight so easily. Hyperactivity can cause a child to be... Read more »
We have been talking a lot about medications here on ADHD Central lately. Part of the reason for this is that so many of you write in with... Read more »
Recently, a blog reader raised some concern about whether a medication he was taking for a psychiatric disorder had caused him to gain... Read more »
By Lucy Williams, Ivanhoe Health Correspondent ORLANDO, Fla. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Some patients undergoing treatment for mental illness gain so... Read more »
A study of more than 400 Alzheimer's patients found that newer antipsychotic drugs caused weight gain and lowered good cholesterol in patients. The... Read more »
In this transcript from NBC's "The Today Show," weight-management expert Madelyn Fernstrom discusses the ways that antidepressants and other... Read more »
Source: ADAM Encyclopedia
Unintentional weight gain is an increase in body weight that occurs when a person takes in more calories than the body needs or... Read more »
Source: ADAM Encyclopedia
Where you live plays a role in your risk for obesity. Simply living in the United States makes a person more susceptible to obesity. The prevalence... Read more »