572 people who take Gabapentin and Sudafed together, and have interactions are studied. What is Gabapentin? Gabapentin has active ingredients of gabapentin. It
Drug Interactions between gabapentin and Sudafed Congestion. This report displays the potential drug interactions for the following 2 drugs: gabapentin; Sudafed Congestion (pseudoephedrine) Edit list (add/remove drugs) Consumer; Professional; Interactions between your drugs
484 medications are known to interact with Sudafed Cough. Includes gabapentin, metoprolol, sertraline.
Can I take sudafed while taking gabapentin? There are no known interactions between Sudafed Congestion and gabapentin. This does not imply that there are no interactions, though.
Sudafed (pseudoephedrine) is a commonly used nasal decongestant Gabapentin Withdrawal: Symptoms, Detox, and Resources. February 12
657 medications are known to interact with Sudafed PE Nighttime Cold. Includes amlodipine, gabapentin, lisinopril.
gabapentin. Hydrodiural, hydrochlorothiazide. Hydrodiuril, hydrochlorothiazide Sudafed, pseudoephedrine. Sumycin, tetracycline. Sustiva, efavirenz. Symbicort
What is Gabapentin? Gabapentin has active ingredients of gabapentin. It is often used in neuralgia. eHealthMe is studying from 322,785 Gabapentin users for its effectiveness, alternative drugs and more. What is Sudafed? Sudafed has active ingredients of pseudoephedrine hydrochloride. It is often used in nasal congestion.
There is no known drug interaction between Sudafed (pseudoephedrine) and gabapentin. They are considered safe to take together. Similarly, Sudafed PE, which contains phenylephrine, is also safe to take with gabapentin. Sudafed and gabapentin don't share many common side effects either aside from gastrointestinal effects (e.g, nausea) and
Comments
This story is great fun; it's sexy too. I especially enjoyed the heroine/narrator's personality, including her fairly strong—but decidedly quirky—ethical principles. I do feel sorry for her uncle, though. He got left out of the action entirely. Perhaps there will be a Part 3? Fine with me, if so.
Not much good news. Went to my neuropathist on Wednesday for a series of tests. 'Yes', I have nerve damage and 'no', the doctor looking at the results couldn't understand why. Essentially, they ran an escalating electric current from various spots on my lower leg and foot to toes to see how I responded. I highly recommend this as a means of torture.
On the downside, I am becoming resistant to my pain medication, so life sucks coming and going. My psychiatrist upped my Gabapentin from 300 Mg to 400 Mg [3x a day] and it isn't helping. Woot? I'd kill for a decent night's sleep.
Thank you for asking. I really wish I had better news.
James aka FinalStand