Drug Interaction Checker
Check for potential drug-drug interactions between your medications. Enter multiple drugs to find known interactions with severity ratings from FDA data.
Abrir Ferramenta →Understanding Drug Interactions
Drug interactions occur when two or more medications affect each other's effectiveness or produce unexpected side effects. Interactions can be pharmacokinetic (affecting absorption, distribution, metabolism, or excretion) or pharmacodynamic (additive, synergistic, or antagonistic effects at the target site).
Severity classifications help prioritize clinical action: major interactions may be life-threatening or require treatment modification; moderate interactions require close monitoring; minor interactions are generally manageable with standard care. The FDA's drug label and clinical trial data are the primary sources for interaction records in our database.
Always consult a pharmacist or physician before combining prescription medications, over-the-counter drugs, or herbal supplements. Drug interaction databases capture documented interactions but cannot predict every possible combination.
Referenciado nos Guias
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Understanding QT ProlongationQT prolongation is a potentially life-threatening cardiac side effect caused by dozens of commonly prescribed medications. This guide explains what …
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How to Use
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1
Enter your medication list
Type or paste the generic or brand names of all medications you are currently taking, including over-the-counter drugs, vitamins, and herbal supplements. The checker searches FDA drug interaction databases and clinical pharmacology literature.
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2
Review flagged interaction pairs
The tool displays each drug pair with a severity rating (major, moderate, or minor) derived from published pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies. Major interactions indicate contraindicated combinations or those requiring immediate physician review.
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3
Consult a pharmacist or prescriber
Use the interaction summaries as a conversation guide when speaking with your healthcare provider. The tool references interaction mechanisms such as CYP450 enzyme inhibition, QT prolongation risk, and additive CNS depression to support informed clinical decisions.
About
Drug interaction checking is a foundational component of medication safety, addressing one of the most preventable causes of adverse drug events. An interaction occurs when one drug alters the pharmacokinetics or pharmacodynamics of another, producing an effect that differs from either agent taken alone. The FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) and published pharmacoepidemiology studies consistently identify drug-drug interactions as contributors to hospitalizations, emergency visits, and preventable deaths, particularly in elderly patients managing multiple chronic conditions.
Pharmacological mechanisms underlying interactions include cytochrome P450 enzyme inhibition or induction, P-glycoprotein transport modulation, plasma protein binding displacement, and additive effects on shared physiological targets such as cardiac ion channels, blood pressure, blood glucose, or clotting pathways. The clinical significance of any interaction depends on the drugs' therapeutic index, the patient's organ function, and whether safer alternatives exist. For high-alert medications such as warfarin, digoxin, lithium, and narrow-therapeutic-index immunosuppressants, even moderate interactions warrant close clinical monitoring.
This tool draws on FDA-approved prescribing information, clinical pharmacology monographs, and established interaction databases to provide evidence-based severity ratings for common drug pairs. Users are encouraged to bring flagged interactions to their pharmacist or prescriber, who can assess individual risk factors and determine whether dose adjustment, alternative therapy, or enhanced monitoring is appropriate. Medication reconciliation at every care transition is recognized by the Joint Commission and WHO Patient Safety Challenge as an essential safety practice.