Lamotrigine may not be suitable for persons with a history of liver or kidney disease, depressed renal function, mental illness, anemia, high blood pressure, angina (chest pain), or irregular heartbeats and other heart problems.
this the lamotrigine and the lamictal the same
You should be able to. They warn against certain anti-depressants and excedrin, as they can make you bruise or bleed more easily, but since it's an anticonvulsant, you should be fine. (I take both and I've never had issues.)
no
Yes! My doctor at rehab proscribed me on 50 mg of Lamictal (lamotrigine) and 24 mg of Suboxone.
Lamotrigine will not show up in a urine test, as the only narcotics are tested for. These narcotics include opiates, marijuana, cocaine, meth, etc. Lamotrigine is primarily used for an anticonvulsant, and mood stabilizer.
According to my doctor, lamotrigine therapy prevents from there being a manic reaction to the citalopram which is frequent in some patients.
Lamotrigine is thought to act at sodium channels in the neuron (nerve cell) to reduce the amount of excitatory neurotransmitters that the nerve cell releases.
no it doesn't
how will doctor switch you from lamictal to lithium
No it is a mood stabilizer.
Lamictal (lamotrigine) is not an SSRI. It is an anti-convulsant.
ld50 for lamotrigine