energy drinks

5 interactions related to energy drinks

energy drinks + beta-blockers

Energy drinks and beta-blockers exert opposing cardiovascular effects: beta-blockers slow heart rate and lower blood pressure, while the caffeine and stimulant load in energy drinks pushes the sympathetic system the other way. This can blunt the medication's effect and, in susceptible people, help provoke an arrhythmia.

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energy drinksbeta-blockershypertensionarrhythmiacaffeinecardiovascularmetoprololpropranolol

energy drinks + adderall

Energy drinks deliver caffeine alongside other stimulant ingredients such as taurine and guarana, producing additive sympathomimetic effects on top of the amphetamine salts in Adderall. Both raise heart rate, blood pressure, and adrenergic activity, which can bring on palpitations, elevated blood pressure, anxiety, and insomnia, and in rare cases more serious heart rhythm disturbances.

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energy drinksadderallamphetamineadhdcaffeinecardiovascularstimulant interactionhypertension

energy drinks + stimulants

Energy drinks layer caffeine, taurine, and guarana on top of any prescription or recreational stimulant (amphetamine, methylphenidate, modafinil, pseudoephedrine, cocaine), pushing heart rate, blood pressure, and central nervous system arousal in the same direction. Because the effects work along overlapping pathways, the combination can produce more strain than either source alone, raising the risk of palpitations, blood-pressure spikes, severe insomnia, and anxiety.

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energy drinksstimulantscaffeineamphetaminemethylphenidatemodafinilcardiovascularsympathomimetic

caffeine + clozapine

Caffeine and clozapine are both broken down by the liver enzyme CYP1A2, and caffeine competitively inhibits it. Large changes in caffeine intake - especially starting or stacking energy drinks - can raise clozapine to toxic levels, with a documented case report of severe toxicity and multiorgan failure.

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caffeineclozapineschizophreniacyp1a2energy drinksantipsychotictoxicitydrug interaction

energy drinks + lithium

The caffeine in energy drinks increases how fast the kidneys clear lithium, so swings in caffeine intake can shift serum lithium in either direction. Heavy or rising caffeine intake can pull lithium toward the lower, less effective end of its narrow range, while abruptly cutting or stopping caffeine while on a stable lithium dose can push serum lithium up into the toxic range. Because lithium has one of the narrowest therapeutic windows in psychiatry, the variability of energy drink use is the real hazard.

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energy drinkslithiumbipolarcaffeinerenal clearancetherapeutic drug monitoringpsychiatric medicationinteraction