Yes. Drink plenty of fluids. Use Tylenol, aspirin or an NSAID for fever or headache. This applies to Claritin (Loratadine) and not Claritin D (Loratadine with Pseudoephedrine)
For Claritin D Yes. These medications each contain two drugs that treat two different conditions. Mucinex DM is an expectorant/cough suppressant. Claritin D is an antihistamine decongestant. Avoid Claritin D if you have high blood pressure or heart problems. If you develop a fever, take Tylenol (acetaminophen) or Motrin (ibuprofen) with any of these.
Source: http://www.bjchealth.org/?id=5488&sid=3
I just asked my pharmicist this question this afternoon while picking up my xopenex refill. He said it was fine provided its the plain mucinex & plain claritin.
No
Suboxone, robitussin, & mucinex together
Not a good idea, robitussin is a nonselective Serotonin re-uptake inhibitor. They will interact,
no. dont mix drugs
DON'T TAKE THE RISK! Mixing narcotics is not in any way a good idea, I also believe that this answer is on robitussin.com
Go by the weight on the box. Cut the pill in half if you need too. And if you are giving both make sure you check ingredients so you don't double up on a certain type of drug
Robitussin CF is a cold formula only; Robitussin DM contains the cough suppressant dextromethorphan, which, when taken in large doses, is capable of producing psychotropic effects. Robitussin CF does not contain that drug.
is Robitussin and tussin dm the same thing
I'm not a doctor, but in my experience it is safe as long as it is not Claritin D. Claritin is loratadine and Advil Cold & Sinus is ibuprofen and Pseudoephedrin. Claritin D is both of these combined minus the ibuprofen, so I would say it is safe, it has never caused me any problems.
I'm afraid that, even though it's unlikely it would be serious, the pseudoephedrine in the Zyrtec D and the dextromethorphan in the Mucinex could interact with each other. However normal Zyrtec with just cetirizine would be perfectly safe.
can you take naproxen and then claritin
No! Claritin is eye drops for blurriness.