Supposedly, Acetaminophen/Tylenol pseudoephedrine cold products may cause moderate cario side effects like heart palpitations,high blood pressure,and chest pain. Consult a doctor or pharmacist!
No. Do not take Acetaminophen in any form with Trileptal.
Acetaminophen (as well as Naproxen Sodium and ibuprofen) is damaging to your liver ever time you take it; taking it with Trileptal can seriously or even fatally compromise your liver even with just a few doses.
Surely your doctor told you to contact him before taking ANY other medications, whether over the counter or prescription?
Xtra strength Tylenol
Cold medicine, Tylenol, Or a prescription from the doctor
Answering "Can you take Tylenol sinus with ibuprofen?"Answering "Can you take Tylenol sinus with ibuprofen?"Yes, infact Ibuprofen and pseudoephedrine (the medical ingredient in Tylenol sinus) are often used together in medicine such as Advil cold & sinus, Children's Motrin, and others.
It is technically safe, however there is pain releiving medication in Tylenol Cold already. If the pain relief from Tylenol Cold is insufficient you could take ibuprofen with it.
You get pregnant.
Over the counter medications, like other medications, should not be taken together without consulting your physician or pharmacist. In this case, the pharmacist would probably be the more knowledgeable.
The only medicine that I have given my 24 month old is Tylenol or Motrin, I have never given him anything else.
The cold medicine is an antihistamine so you are taking double the amount of antihistamine.
Of course not! Many cure diseases. Any drug that is used and abused more than prescribed can be harmful to your body. Cold medicine, flu medicine, tums, cough syrup, Tylenol, even vitamins!
There should be no problem taking these to medications in close temporal proximity, as there is no significant interactions between aspirin and tylenol.
The answer is probably yes - dramamine is an antihistamine while Tylenol is generally acetominophen (an NSAID). However, if the Tylenol has any other active ingredient (check the back of the box), I would not mix the medications without consulting a pharmacist.
Their is a coralation between the two but nothing has proven it true. Even so it is probably not that drastic.