hawthorn
5 interactions related to hawthorn
losartan + hawthorn
Hawthorn modestly lowers blood pressure through vasodilation and endothelial effects. Taken with losartan, an angiotensin II receptor blocker, the two can add up and occasionally cause dizziness or lightheadedness, mainly in people who already run low or who take more than one blood pressure medication.
metoprolol + hawthorn
Hawthorn (Crataegus) has mild vasodilatory and heart-supporting effects that can add to the blood-pressure and heart-rate lowering of metoprolol, modestly increasing the chance of low blood pressure, a slow pulse, dizziness, or fainting. The interaction is pharmacodynamic (it happens at the receptor and tissue level), not metabolic, so taking the doses at different times does not prevent it.
digoxin + hawthorn
Hawthorn (Crataegus) shares digoxin's cardiac target and can cross-react with the immunoassays used to monitor digoxin, so a serum level may read falsely high or low. Controlled testing shows little change in how much digoxin reaches the bloodstream, so the practical concerns are additive cardiac effects and confounded lab monitoring rather than altered absorption.
hawthorn + coq10
Hawthorn (Crataegus) flavonoids and oligomeric procyanidins act on the mechanical and vascular side of heart function, while CoQ10 supports the heart's energy metabolism in the electron transport chain. The two are sometimes combined as low-risk cardiovascular adjuncts, but the supportive human evidence is for each ingredient separately, not for the pair, so any "synergy" is extrapolated rather than demonstrated.
garlic + hawthorn
Garlic and hawthorn each modestly lower blood pressure on their own, and both have mild blood-thinning activity, so taking them together can add up to a slightly larger drop in blood pressure and a small increase in bleeding tendency. There is no human trial of the two taken together, so any true 'synergy' beyond simple additive effects is unproven. The practical concern is layering them on top of antihypertensive, antiplatelet, or anticoagulant medication.
