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Leo Galland, MD is a board-certified internist, author and internationally recognized leader in integrated medicine. Dr. Galland is the founder of Pill Advised, a web application for learning about medications, supplements and food. Sign up for FREE to discover how your medications and vitamins interact. Watch his videos on YouTube and join the Pill Advised Facebook page.

Mixing Medications and Vitamins:
When It Hurts, When It Helps
Leo GallandMarch 12
Mixing medications and vitamins can be like mixing friends.
Sometimes they just don’t get along, and at other times, you’re playing matchmaker to future couples.
Let’s start with a simple example.
Your cholesterol is high, and your doctor has prescribed Lipitor to bring it down.
At the same, you start taking a multivitamin because you feel stressed and tired.
But that could be a bad idea.
Statin drugs like Lipitor block the antioxidant effects of vitamin E, found in multivitamins, and vitamin E interferes with the health benefits of statins.
These two guests need separate dinner dates.
Like most busy people, juggling the desire to be healthy while working long hours, you’re mixing medications and vitamins and you probably have no idea how they interact with each other. Your doctor may not either. Several studies have found that the attitude toward vitamins and other nutritional supplements is Don’t ask, don’t tell.
So how do you know when interactions among drugs and supplements will be beneficial, rather than harmful? It’s all in the details.
Statins: the most frequently prescribed drugs in the U.S.
Millions of Americans take statins, which are used to reduce cholesterol. Chances are you take one yourself or know someone who does. Perhaps you have seen the ads on TV for blockbuster statins like Lipitor, Crestor and or Zocor. Statins work by blocking a liver enzyme that is needed for cholesterol formation. Extensive research indicates that statins can decrease the rate of heart attacks in people at high risk and may also reduce inflammation in blood vessels.
But like all other drugs, statins can have severe side effects, which get worse with increasing dosage. The most common are muscle damage, liver damage and fatigue. About 30,000 Americans have experienced life-threatening statin side effects.
Statins deplete coenzyme Q10
Coenzyme Q10 is a vital antioxidant produced in your liver by the same enzyme that produces cholesterol. Muscle cells and nerves are especially sensitive to a deficiency of coenzyme Q10. Depletion of coenzyme Q10 by statins may contribute to their side effects. Diabetics, people with heart disease or those on a low fat diet (which does not supply dietary coenzyme Q10) may benefit from taking coenzyme Q10 if they are taking statins. The existing clinical research may underestimate the need for coenzyme Q10 among statin users, because it’s conducted over a period of weeks or months, whereas people who use statins take them for decades.
When supplements hurt statins
Other supplements that should not be mixed with statins include:
When supplements help statins:
And don’t forget about food. There’s no point in allowing the food you eat to fight the medication you take. The protective effect of statins is enhanced by a diet that is low in saturated fat and naturally high in fiber and omega-3 fats. Eating well can reduce the dose of drug you need and therefore reduce the risk of side effects.
Two components of a healthy diet that need to be watched if you’re taking a statin are grapefruit juice and pomegranate juice. Each of these can raise the blood level of statins. If you increase or decrease the amounts of these juices you consume, you may have to change the dose of statin you’re taking.
To learn more about interactions between medications and supplements, visit the web application I created called Pill Advised: http://www.nutritionworkshop.com/register.php