Children's Triacting Night Time Interactions
There are 577 drugs known to interact with Children's Triacting Night Time (diphenhydramine/phenylephrine), along with 12 disease interactions, and 2 alcohol/food interactions. Of the total drug interactions, 42 are major, 532 are moderate, and 3 are minor.
- View all 577 medications that may interact with Children's Triacting Night Time
- View Children's Triacting Night Time alcohol/food interactions (2)
- View Children's Triacting Night Time disease interactions (12)
Most frequently checked interactions
View interaction reports for Children's Triacting Night Time (diphenhydramine / phenylephrine) and the medicines listed below.
- azelastine nasal
- azelastine nasal
- cetirizine
- cetirizine
- Children's Motrin (ibuprofen)
- Children's Motrin (ibuprofen)
- Children's Triacting Daytime (dextromethorphan / phenylephrine)
- Children's Triacting Daytime (dextromethorphan / phenylephrine)
- Children's Tylenol (acetaminophen)
- Children's Tylenol (acetaminophen)
- clonidine
- clonidine
- Invega (paliperidone)
- Invega (paliperidone)
- methylphenidate
- methylphenidate
- Nasacort Allergy 24HR (triamcinolone nasal)
- Nasacort Allergy 24HR (triamcinolone nasal)
Children's Triacting Night Time alcohol/food interactions
There are 2 alcohol/food interactions with Children's Triacting Night Time (diphenhydramine / phenylephrine).
Children's Triacting Night Time disease interactions
There are 12 disease interactions with Children's Triacting Night Time (diphenhydramine / phenylephrine) which include:
- depression
- cardiovascular disease
- anticholinergic effects
- asthma/COPD
- cardiovascular
- renal/liver disease
- glaucoma
- liver disease
- resp depression
- BPH
- diabetes
- glaucoma
More about Children's Triacting Night Time (diphenhydramine / phenylephrine)
- Children's Triacting Night Time consumer information
- Compare alternatives
- Side effects
- Dosage information
- During pregnancy
- Drug class: upper respiratory combinations
- En español
Related treatment guides
Drug Interaction Classification
Highly clinically significant. Avoid combinations; the risk of the interaction outweighs the benefit. | |
Moderately clinically significant. Usually avoid combinations; use it only under special circumstances. | |
Minimally clinically significant. Minimize risk; assess risk and consider an alternative drug, take steps to circumvent the interaction risk and/or institute a monitoring plan. | |
No interaction information available. |
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Further information
Always consult your healthcare provider to ensure the information displayed on this page applies to your personal circumstances.