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  2. Drug interaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_interaction

    When two drugs affect each other, it is a drugdrug interaction (DDI). The risk of a DDI increases with the number of drugs used. [1] A large share of elderly people regularly use five or more medications or supplements, with a significant risk of side-effects from drugdrug interactions. [2] Drug interactions can be of three kinds ...

  3. Drug interactions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Drug_interactions&...

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  4. Grapefruit–drug interactions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grapefruit–drug_interactions

    [19] [31] For drugs recently sold on the market, drugs have information pages (monographs) that provide information on any potential interaction between a medication and grapefruit juice. [19] Because there is a growing number of medications that are known to interact with citrus, [ 1 ] patients should consult a pharmacist or physician before ...

  5. Combined drug intoxication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combined_drug_intoxication

    Close association between prescribing physicians and pharmacies, along with the computerization of prescriptions and patients' medical histories, aim to avoid the occurrence of dangerous drug interactions. Lists of contraindications for a drug are usually provided with it, either in monographs, package inserts (accompanying prescribed ...

  6. Adverse drug reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adverse_drug_reaction

    Type A: augmented pharmacological effects, which are dose-dependent and predictable [5]; Type A reactions, which constitute approximately 80% of adverse drug reactions, are usually a consequence of the drug's primary pharmacological effect (e.g., bleeding when using the anticoagulant warfarin) or a low therapeutic index of the drug (e.g., nausea from digoxin), and they are therefore predictable.

  7. Talk:Drug interaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Drug_interaction

    E.g. the combination of grapefruit juice and simvastatin is a drug interaction (drug-food interaction), whereas ceftriaxone sodium and lidocaine are chemically incompatible but do not have a drug interaction in the body; i.e. you can treat endocarditis with IV cetriaxone and treat pulseless ventricular tachycardia with IV lidocaine at the same ...

  8. Combination drug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combination_drug

    A combination drug or a fixed-dose combination (FDC) is a medicine that includes two or more active ingredients combined in a single dosage form. [1] Terms like "combination drug" or "combination drug product" can be common shorthand for an FDC product (since most combination drug products are currently FDCs), although the latter is more precise if in fact referring to a mass-produced product ...

  9. Pharmacomicrobiomics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharmacomicrobiomics

    Pharmacomicrobiomics, proposed by Prof. Marco Candela for the ERC-2009-StG project call (proposal n. 242860, titled "PharmacoMICROBIOMICS, study of the microbiome determinants of the different drug responses between individuals"), and publicly coined for the first time in 2010 by Rizkallah et al. (from Ramy K. Aziz research group), is defined ...