energy drinks

5 interactions related to energy drinks

energy drinks + beta-blockers

Energy drinks raise sympathetic tone through caffeine, taurine, and guarana, opposing the heart-rate and blood-pressure lowering effects of beta-blockers like metoprolol, atenolol, propranolol, and bisoprolol. Case reports document refractory arrhythmias and hypertensive episodes in patients on beta-blocker therapy who consumed energy drinks regularly.

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energy drinksbeta-blockershypertensionarrhythmiacaffeinecardiovascularmetoprololpropranolol

energy drinks + adderall

Energy drinks deliver high-dose caffeine (often 80-300 mg per can) plus taurine, guarana, and B vitamins that produce additive sympathomimetic effects on top of the amphetamine salts in Adderall. Both substances raise heart rate, blood pressure, and norepinephrine release, which can precipitate palpitations, hypertension, anxiety, insomnia, and in rare cases tachyarrhythmia or coronary vasospasm.

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energy drinksadderallamphetamineadhdcaffeinecardiovascularstimulant interactionhypertension

energy drinks + stimulants

Energy drinks layer high-dose caffeine, taurine, guarana, and ginseng on top of any prescription or recreational stimulant (amphetamine, methylphenidate, modafinil, pseudoephedrine, cocaine), producing additive sympathomimetic effects on heart rate, blood pressure, and CNS arousal. The combined load increases the risk of tachyarrhythmia, hypertensive crisis, severe insomnia, and anxiety.

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energy drinksstimulantscaffeineamphetaminemethylphenidatemodafinilcardiovascularsympathomimetic

caffeine + clozapine

Caffeine inhibits CYP1A2, the main enzyme that metabolizes clozapine. High caffeine intake (especially energy drinks) can dramatically raise clozapine levels, with case reports of life-threatening toxicity including multiorgan failure.

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caffeineclozapineschizophreniacyp1a2energy drinksantipsychotictoxicitydrug interaction

energy drinks + lithium

The caffeine in energy drinks increases renal clearance of lithium by raising glomerular filtration rate and sodium excretion, which can lower serum lithium below the therapeutic window and trigger relapse of bipolar symptoms. Conversely, abrupt reduction or cessation of high caffeine intake while on a stable lithium dose can push serum lithium into the toxic range; a published case report documented a 24% rise in serum lithium after caffeine withdrawal.

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energy drinkslithiumbipolarcaffeinerenal clearancetherapeutic drug monitoringpsychiatric medicationinteraction