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Phenobarbital can interact with monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs), antidepressants, asthma medicine, cold medicine, anti-allergy medicine, sedatives, steroids, tranquilizers, and vitamins.
Antidepressants.
Percocet does not interact with any antidepressants. Whatever your doctor has prescribed for you will be OK to take with this pain medicine. Remember that Percocet is very addictive, though, and be careful not to take any more than the doctor has said to take.
Yes, you can eat analgesics and antidepressants together.
Yes. Antidepressants don't really react with anything except MAOIs and some other psychiatric medicine.
they use the for medicine
Phychologist should not prescribe medication. If they want to prescribe let them enter medical school and study medicine.
You need to gradually reduce the dose--otherwise you may make things worse and your feelings will go amok. Check in with your doctor before doing so. It is very tempting when you feel well to stop taking medications, but it is short-sighted. Answer Suddenly stopping antidepressants without gradually withdrawing it causes untoward effects. Stopping antidepressants takes you back into depression. Some people in that state have attempted suicide. Many are fed up of antidepressants if they haven't experienced complete relief and desire to stop antidepressants. In this cases 1)It is sensible to inform your doctor 2)with the permission of doctor you may start gradually withdrawing one medicine, stop it. Then another medicine dose be tapered then stopped. At any point if the symptoms of depression return you know that medicine has been useful to you and you continue taking it in the correct dose.
Every woman is different. Some women react differently to medicine than the "norm".
not even medicine can cure death.
Medication is always the first and recommended treatment for bipolar disorder, but what will also work is regular therapy. The medicine includes antidepressants.
Central nervous system (CNS) depressants such as medicine for allergies, colds, hay fever, and asthma; sedatives; tranquilizers; prescription pain medicine; muscle relaxants.Medicines other than those listed above may interact with benzodiazepines.