this is definitely a question you should consult with your doctor.
im not quite sure if an antidepressant and an antibiotic would react, but its not the kind of thing to leave to chance.
Firstly, if your doctor prescribed both of them you are ok. I am on Citalopram and have a chest infection. I was given Amoxicillin and they do not interfere with each other.
There are no known drug interactions between Zoloft and the birth control pill
You should ask your pharmacist, they are trained to know about drug interactions.
Amoxicillin and temazepam are safe to take together. There are no drug-drug interactions associated with the two drugs as well as no precautions that pertain to either condition that would cause someone to take either medication.
No reference found related to amoxicillin as a sulfate drug.
What are drug interactions with pyridoxine?
Zoloft is not a controlled substance, so it is drug class 6.
yes
No. The only drugs that I have been informed that will affect that form of birth control are Tuberculosis meds and Seizure meds.
Well the drug in cold and cough medicines that makes you "trip" is dextromorphan or DXM for short. Taking dextromorphan with sertraline(zoloft) can cause serotonin syndrome, which is pretty dangerous and the medicine information that came with my zoloft says it can be fatal. I also think that your not supposed to take adderal with zoloft either, probably for the same reasons, but Im not sure about that one. Just google drug interactions between the things you might be taking. Gotta be on the safe side with medicine!
No known adverse drug interactions.
Azithromycin is such a low dose will act as a bacteriostatic drug. So it will stop the division of bacteria. Amoxicillin is bacteriocidal drug and act on rapidly dividing bacteria only. So in this case the amoxicillin will go to waste, means it will have no positive effect as an antibiotic.
There is a site called drugs.com that will answer and drug interaction questions. No results found - however, this does not necessarily mean no interactions exist. ALWAYS consult with your doctor or pharmacist