berberine
5 interactions related to berberine
berberine + red yeast rice
Berberine and red yeast rice are frequently combined in cholesterol-lowering nutraceuticals and act through complementary routes: berberine upregulates hepatic LDL receptors and reduces lipogenesis, while red yeast rice's monacolin K (chemically identical to lovastatin) inhibits HMG-CoA reductase. Together they produce additive LDL reduction. Secondarily, berberine mildly inhibits CYP3A4, the enzyme that clears lovastatin/monacolin K, so it can modestly raise monacolin K exposure and add to statin-type muscle risk. In practice the pairing is generally well tolerated because red yeast rice delivers only a low, variable, unregulated monacolin dose, so the additive muscle/CYP3A4 concern sits at the low end and the intended lipid-lowering synergy dominates.
rosuvastatin + berberine
Rosuvastatin is carried into liver cells by the OATP1B1 transporter. In a laboratory study using human liver-cell cultures, berberine increased OATP1B1 activity and pushed more rosuvastatin into the cells. This is an early, test-tube signal only: there is no human or animal data showing it changes blood levels, cholesterol response, or side-effect risk in real life.
glipizide + berberine
Berberine lowers blood sugar on its own and also slows the breakdown of glipizide by inhibiting the liver enzyme CYP2C9. Taken together, the two effects can stack and increase the risk of low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), which with a sulfonylurea like glipizide can be prolonged. Do not combine them without prescriber supervision.
simvastatin + berberine
Simvastatin is activated and cleared by the CYP3A4 enzyme. A human study found that repeated berberine inhibits CYP3A4, which could raise simvastatin levels and increase the risk of muscle-related side effects. Some animal data suggest berberine can also induce CYP3A4 over time, so the net effect on statin exposure is hard to predict. There are no published human case reports of myopathy from this specific combination, so the concern is mechanistic and moderate.
atorvastatin + berberine
In human trials, adding berberine to a statin did not raise muscle or liver side effects, and the two are sometimes studied together for cholesterol. The earlier claim that berberine meaningfully raises atorvastatin levels and risk is not supported by human evidence.
