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The Supplement-Medication Combo You Need To Avoid

 
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The claim: St. John’s Wort, a popular herbal supplement used as a complementary and alternative treatment for depression, reduces the concentration of certain drugs in the body, suggests a new report in The Journal of Alternative and Complimentary Medicine. Those drugs include oral contraceptives, blood thinners, cancer chemotherapy, and blood pressure medications.

The Supplement-Medication Combo You Need To Avoid

The research: Wake Forest University researchers analyzed data collected from 1993 to 2010 by the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, a database that contains all diagnoses and treatments, and found St. John’s Wort was used in potentially harmful combinations 28% of the time. Some of these possible drug interactions could contribute to serotonin syndrome (a condition that causes high levels of serotonin to accumulate in your body, which could be fatal), heart disease, and unintended pregnancy.

What it means: Most people don't view natural supplements as drugs, but in many ways, they act the same way; for instance, St. John’s Wort affects the temporal processes in the body, says Sarah Taylor, MD, assistant professor of dermatology at Wake Forest Baptist and lead author of the study.

The bottom line: “You shouldn’t be shy to tell your doctor what you're taking,” says Taylor. Tell your doctor about everything you're taking, even if she doesn't ask. Taylor also suggests that if you’re interested in taking natural therapies, such as St. John’s Wort, do your homework. Go to the Mayo Clinic website and click the link to supplements, as it will tell you all about potential drug interactions, she says.

Fuente: www.prevention.com
WARNING: Virgnia T Sherl made this note and was not rated by users as credible.
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