ashwagandha

6 interactions related to ashwagandha

caffeine + ashwagandha

Caffeine is a stimulant that raises alertness and cortisol; ashwagandha is an adaptogenic herb that, taken on its own, modestly lowers cortisol and perceived stress in human trials. People combine them hoping ashwagandha will take the edge off caffeine's jitters. That pairing is plausible but has not been tested directly in humans, so the 'calm focus' benefit remains theoretical rather than proven. The combination is generally well tolerated in healthy adults.

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caffeineashwagandhaadaptogencortisolstressanxietywithania somniferasleepjitterssupplements

ashwagandha + magnesium

Ashwagandha helps dampen the body's stress-hormone response while magnesium supports the relaxation and nervous-system pathways that let the body wind down. The two act on different parts of the stress-and-sleep system, but no human trial has tested the specific combination, so any added benefit is inferred from each ingredient on its own rather than demonstrated together.

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ashwagandhamagnesiumsleepanxietystresscortisoladaptogensynergygaba

ashwagandha + l-theanine

L-theanine, an amino acid from green tea, produces a relatively quick sense of calm focus by increasing alpha brain-wave activity and gently nudging GABA and other neurotransmitters. Ashwagandha works more slowly, modulating the stress (HPA) axis over weeks of daily use. Because they act through different pathways on different timescales, they are commonly stacked for stress, and there is no known harmful interaction. Importantly, no human trial has tested the combination itself, so the pairing is a mechanistic rationale rather than a proven synergy.

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ashwagandhal-theaninestressanxietycortisolrelaxationsynergyadaptogengabaalpha waves

levothyroxine + ashwagandha

Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) can lower TSH and raise T3 and T4, so it acts on your own thyroid axis on top of the levothyroxine you already take. A randomized trial showed this hormone shift in people with subclinical hypothyroidism, and separate case reports describe ashwagandha-related thyrotoxicosis and painless thyroiditis. Those case reports were not in people taking levothyroxine at the same time, so the additive-overreplacement scenario is plausible but not directly documented.

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levothyroxineashwagandhawithania somniferathyroidhyperthyroidismthyrotoxicosistshadaptogen

ashwagandha + reishi

Ashwagandha and reishi are complementary adaptogens often combined in stress-and-sleep formulas. Ashwagandha calms the HPA axis and cortisol output, while reishi supports parasympathetic and immune balance. They act through different routes, so the effects layer rather than collide. This is a low-risk, complementary pairing rather than a dangerous drug interaction.

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ashwagandhareishiadaptogenstresscortisolhpa-axissynergymushroom

rhodiola + ashwagandha

Rhodiola rosea and ashwagandha are both adaptogens that act through different mechanisms. Rhodiola tends to be energizing and anti-fatigue, working on monoamines and the HPA axis, while ashwagandha tends to be calming and helps normalize cortisol. Many people pair them so that rhodiola covers the activating, daytime side of the stress response and ashwagandha covers the calming, evening side. No trial has tested the exact combination, so the rationale is mechanistic rather than proven.

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rhodiolaashwagandhaadaptogenstresscortisolfatigueanxietyhpa axissynergyenergy