metformin
7 interactions related to metformin
metformin + vitamin b12
Long-term metformin use can reduce vitamin B12 absorption, sometimes enough to cause deficiency.
metformin + alpha-lipoic acid
Metformin and alpha-lipoic acid both lower blood glucose by independent routes, so their effects can be additive. The added effect is mild for most people, but matters more in those also taking insulin or a sulfonylurea, or who are elderly, thin, or on a beta-blocker.
metformin + chromium
Chromium is sometimes taken to support blood sugar, and in theory it could add to metformin's glucose-lowering effect. In practice, human trials are mixed: some show a small improvement in insulin sensitivity while most show little or no change in actual blood glucose. The combination is generally well tolerated, but because both are aimed at the same goal, it is worth flagging to your prescriber and watching for any signs of a low.
metformin + cinnamon
Cinnamon has a mild glucose-lowering effect that can add modestly to metformin's. In pooled human trial data the effect on fasting glucose is small and there are no reports of serious low blood sugar from the combination, so the practical concern is minor for most people. The main extra consideration is choosing the lower-coumarin Ceylon variety for long-term daily supplement use.
psyllium + metformin
Psyllium's viscous gel can slow and reduce metformin absorption when taken together, potentially blunting its glucose-lowering effect, while psyllium's own action lowers glucose — making net blood-sugar effects variable.
glucomannan + metformin
Glucomannan is a highly viscous soluble fiber that swells in the gut and can slow or reduce the absorption of medications taken at the same time, including metformin. Glucomannan also has its own modest glucose-lowering effect that may add to metformin's, so spacing the two apart and watching your blood sugar is sensible.
ginger tea + metformin
Ginger (Zingiber officinale) has modest blood-glucose-lowering activity in randomized trials in type 2 diabetes, mainly improving fasting glucose and HbA1c. Combined with metformin the effect is generally additive rather than dangerous. Metformin alone rarely causes hypoglycemia, so the practical concern is small; the risk of a true low rises mainly when ginger is layered onto insulin or an insulin-secreting drug.
