Bloodindex - Home
Search Bloodindex
Login Name :
Password :
 
 
 Dear Guest, Welcome to Bloodindex Sign in | Sign up



My health diary Health Diary - An Online Electronic Personal Health Record Solution

My health folder Health folder

Blood sugar diary Blood sugar diary

BP printable diary Blood pressure report charts and diary

Cholestrol diary Cholestrol Report Diary

Clinical tests diary Customizable Clinical Tests Diary

Treatment diary Treatment follow up diary

Directory service Directory Service

Knowledge zone knowledge Service

Download zone Download Center

Health calculators Health Calculators

News zone News Zone

Tell my friend Tell My Friend

Blood services Blood Services

Support services Download Center

Link map Download Center


HIV/AIDS care community


Diabetes Zone - Comprehensive detailed information on Diabetes


My Health Folder


bloodindex AIDS zone


You are here : Home AIDS Factsheet Medications To Fight HIV Drug Interactions

Drug Interactions


WHAT ARE DRUG INTERACTIONS?

AIDS FACT-SHEET

Background Information
 -What is AIDS?
 -HIV Testing
 -Acute HIV Infection
 -How HIV Drugs Get Approved
 -HIV Life Cycle


Laboratory Tests
 -Normal Laboratory Values
 -Complete Blood Count (CBC)
 -Chemistry Panel
 -Blood Sugar and Fats
 -CD4 (T-cell) Tests
 -Viral Load Tests
 -HIV Resistance Testing
 -Monitoring Drug Levels


Preventing HIV Infection
 -Stopping the Spread of HIV
 -How Risky Is It?
 -Condoms
 -Drug Use and HIV
 -Harm Reduction and HIV
 -Treatment After Microbicides
 -Microbicides


Living with HIV
 -Choosing an HIV Care Provider
 -Medical Appointments
 -Telling Others You are HIV Positive
 -Participating in a Clinical Trial
 -How to Spot HIV/AIDS Fraud
 -Vaccinations and HIV
 -Medications to Fight HIV

 -HIV Life Cycle
 -Taking Current Antiretroviral Drugs
 -What Is Antiretroviral Therapy (ART)?
 -Adherence
 -Treatment Interruptions
 -Drug Interactions
 -Strengthening the Immune System

 -Immune Therapies in Development
 -Immune Restoration
 -Interleukin-2
 -Immune Restoration Syndrome
 -Opportunistic Infections

 -Opportunistic Infections


Side Effects and Their Treatments
 -Side Effects
 -Fatigue
 -Anemia
 -Body Shape Changes (Lipodystrophy)
 -Diarrhea
 -Peripheral Neuropathy
 -Mitochondrial Toxicity
 -Bone Problems
 -Depression and HIV


Patient Populations

 -Women and HIV
 -Pregnancy and HIV aids
 -Children and HIV
 -Older People and HIV


Alternative and Complementary Therapies
 -Alternative and Complementary Therapies
 -Ayurvedic Medicine
 -Chinese Acupuncture
 -Chinese Herbalism
 -Cat's Claw
 -DHEA
 -DNCB (Dinitrochlorobenzene)
 -Echinacea
 -Essiac
 -Marijuana
 -Silymarin (Milk Thistle)



 -Nutrition
 -Nutrition
 -Vitamins and Minerals
 -Exercise and HIV
 -Smoking and HIV

The amount of a prescription medication needs to be high enough to help fight a specific disease, and low enough to avoid causing too many side effects. Other medications, non-prescription (over-the-counter) drugs or recreational drugs, herbal products or even food sometimes cause large changes in the amount of a medication in your bloodstream. An overdose can cause serious side effects. An under-dose can mean that the medication will not work.

Everyone taking anti-HIV drugs needs to be very careful about drug interactions.

HOW DOES THE BODY PROCESS DRUGS?
Our body recognizes drugs as "foreign substances." It removes them, usually in urine or in bowel movements. Many drugs are removed unchanged by the kidneys. They leave the body in urine. Other drugs have to be processed by the liver. Chemicals in the liver (enzymes) change drug molecules. Then they are eliminated in urine or in bowel movements.

When you take a pill, the drug goes from the stomach into the intestine. Then it goes to the liver before it is circulated to the rest of the body. If the drug is easily broken down by the liver then very little of the drug reaches the body.

HOW DO DRUGS INTERACT?
The most common drug interactions involve the liver. Several drugs can slow down or speed up the action of liver enzymes. This can cause big changes in the blood levels of other drugs that are broken down by the same enzyme.

A few drugs slow down the kidneys. This increases the blood levels of substances that are normally removed by the kidneys.

The most common drug interactions involve the liver. Several drugs can slow down or speed up the action of liver enzymes. This can cause big changes in the blood levels of other drugs that are broken down by the same enzyme.

WHY DOES FOOD MATTER?
Any pills that you take go through the stomach. Most drugs are absorbed faster if the stomach is empty. For some medications, this is a good thing, but it can also cause more side effects. Some medications need to be taken with food so that they are broken down more slowly or to reduce their side effects. Other medications are taken with fatty foods because they dissolve in fat and are absorbed better.

Stomach acid breaks down some drugs, including ddI (didanosine, Videx®). The original ddI tablets include an antacid buffer that protects the drug from stomach acid. The buffer, however, interferes with the absorption of indinavir (Crixivan®), so these drugs should not be taken at the same time. Newer versions of ddI are easier to take.

WHAT DRUGS CAUSE THE MOST INTERACTIONS?
Protease inhibitors and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors are processed by the liver and cause many drug interactions.

Some other types of drugs that are likely to cause interactions include:

  • Antifungal drugs with names that end in "-azole"
  • Some antibiotics (names end in "-mycin")
  • The antacid cimetidine (Tagamet®)
  • Some drugs that prevent convulsions, including Dilantin® and Tegretol®.


NOTE: This is not a complete list. Other drugs may also cause interactions.

WHAT OTHER DRUGS NEED SPECIAL ATTENTION?
With some drugs, just a little too much in the bloodstream can cause a dangerous overdose, and if the amount is just a little too low, the drug might not work. This is called having a "narrow therapeutic index". If you are taking this type of drug, any interactions could be dangerous or possibly fatal.

Drugs to watch out for include:
  • Some antihistamines
  • Drugs to control heart rhythm
  • Some pain killers derived from opium
  • Propulsid®, which increases bowel activity
  • Some sedatives, including Versed® and Halcion®
  • Drugs to thin the blood, including Coumadin®
  • Methadone
  • Drugs to treat erectile dysfunction such as Viagra
  • Some drugs used to treat tuberculosis, especially rifampin


Other drugs to watch out for include recreational drugs. There are no careful studies of interactions with recreational drugs, but there have been reports of overdoses and death caused by taking recreational drugs while taking anti-HIV drugs.

Women taking birth control pills should talk to their doctor about drug interactions. Some anti-HIV drugs can lower the levels of these drugs. This could result in an unwanted pregnancy.

WHAT ABOUT HERBAL PRODUCTS?
There has been very little research on interactions between herbal products and medications. Recent treatment guidelines indicate that St. John's Wort should not be taken along with any protease inhibitor or non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor. Garlic also can reduce blood levels of anti-hiv drugs. Garic supplements, or possibly large amounts of garlic in food, might cause problems for someone using the protease inhibitor saquinavir as the only protease inhibitor in their regimen.

THE BOTTOM LINE
Many drugs to treat HIV can interact with other medications, drugs, or herbal products. These interactions can lead to serious or fatal overdoses of some drugs, or can drop drug levels too low to do any good. You and your physician should carefully review the information that comes with each medication (the "package insert"). Ask for this information for each drug that you are taking. Also, be sure that a doctor reviews ALL medications, drugs and herbs you are taking.

You are here : Home AIDS Factsheet Medications To Fight HIV Drug Interactions






Community encyclopedia for health care
 
Bloodindex - Blood pressure diary, reports and charts

Related pages

Medications To Fight HIV

Drug use and HIV

Monitoring Drug Levels

AIDS Fact sheet - Adherence

Side Effects

 
 
 
Events | About us | Link to us | Contact us | Associates | Services | Fund-rising options | Feedback | Privacy policy | Disclaimer | Report Bugs
© 2007 bloodindex