folate
8 interactions related to folate
lamotrigine + folate
In a randomized controlled trial of bipolar depression (CEQUEL), adding folic acid to lamotrigine appeared to blunt lamotrigine's antidepressant benefit, an effect seen mainly in people carrying the COMT Met allele. The interaction is pharmacodynamic, not pharmacokinetic, so lamotrigine blood levels stay unchanged. The exact mechanism is not established, and the signal is limited to bipolar depression rather than epilepsy.
methotrexate + folate
Methotrexate works by blocking the enzyme that recycles folate into its active form, which depletes folate in normal tissues and drives common side effects such as nausea, mouth sores, and elevated liver enzymes. Folic acid supplementation reduces these side effects without compromising efficacy at the doses used for autoimmune disease, but it should not be taken on the same day as methotrexate, and it should never be added on your own when methotrexate is used for cancer.
vitamin b6 + folate
Vitamin B6 and folate both work inside one-carbon metabolism, the network that recycles homocysteine and supplies methyl groups. Folate (as 5-MTHF) remethylates homocysteine back to methionine, while B6 (as PLP) is the cofactor for serine hydroxymethyltransferase, which feeds the folate cycle, and for cystathionine beta-synthase, which clears excess homocysteine through the transsulfuration pathway. Folate carries the main homocysteine-lowering effect; B6's contribution shows up mainly after a protein (methionine) load rather than in fasting levels.
green tea + folate
Green tea catechins, especially EGCG, partly inhibit the proton-coupled folate transporter (PCFT) in the small intestine, the main carrier for absorbing dietary folate and folic acid. In a controlled human study, taking folic acid together with green tea modestly lowered its peak blood level and total absorption compared with water. The direction is well established but the effect is small, and it is easily managed by separating the two in time.
alcohol + folate
Chronic alcohol use causes folate deficiency through several mechanisms: it inhibits the reduced folate carrier in the intestine (blocking absorption), reduces the liver's uptake and storage of folate, and increases urinary folate loss. Folate depletion in turn accelerates alcohol-induced liver injury and disrupts one-carbon metabolism and DNA methylation.
phenytoin + folate
Phenytoin and folate interact in both directions: long-term phenytoin lowers folate through enzyme induction and reduced absorption, while supplemental folate can speed phenytoin clearance and lower its blood level enough to allow seizures to return in some people. The interaction is real but monitorable, so changes should be coordinated with your neurologist rather than avoided.
vitamin b12 + folate
Vitamin B12 and folate are interdependent partners in the methionine cycle: the active form of folate (5-methyltetrahydrofolate) donates a methyl group, while vitamin B12 is the required cofactor for methionine synthase, the enzyme that converts homocysteine back to methionine. Adequate intake of both supports DNA synthesis, healthy red blood cells, and homocysteine balance. Taking high-dose folate alone is the key safety concern, because folate can correct B12-deficiency anemia while allowing nerve damage to progress unnoticed.
oral contraceptives + folate
Combined oral contraceptive use is associated with modestly lower plasma and red blood cell folate levels, likely through increased turnover and urinary excretion. Because fertility can return quickly after stopping the pill, lower folate stores at that moment can matter for the neural tube risk of an early pregnancy.
