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If you are currently being treated with any of the following medications, you
should not use kava without first talking to your healthcare provider:
Anticonvulsants Kava may exaggerate the effects of medications
used to treat seizures.
Central Nervous System (CNS) depressants Kava may enhance the
effects of CNS depressants such as benzodiazepines used for sleep disturbances
or anxiety (particularly alprazolam) and barbiturates used for sleep disorders
and seizures (such as pentobarbital). In fact, there has been one report of
someone going into a coma from the combination of kava and alprazolam.
Antipsychotic medications Kava may increase the risk of
unpleasant side effects associated with phenothiazine medications (often used
for the treatment of schizophrenia), such as chlorpromazine and promethazine.
Levodopa There has been at least one report that kava may
reduce the effectiveness of levodopa, a medication used to treat Parkinson's
disease. Therefore, you should not take this herb if you are taking any
medications containing levodopa. |
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The publisher does not accept any responsibility for the
accuracy of the information or the consequences arising from the application,
use, or misuse of any of the information contained herein, including any injury
and/or damage to any person or property as a matter of product liability,
negligence, or otherwise. No warranty, expressed or implied, is made in regard
to the contents of this material. No claims or endorsements are made for any
drugs or compounds currently marketed or in investigative use. This material is
not intended as a guide to self-medication. The reader is advised to discuss the
information provided here with a doctor, pharmacist, nurse, or other authorized
healthcare practitioner and to check product information (including package
inserts) regarding dosage, precautions, warnings, interactions, and
contraindications before administering any drug, herb, or supplement discussed
herein. |