Your gonna sleep a lot and really heavy
Vivitrol injections and Ambien together produce no interactions.
Ambien is for sleep, Aricept is for early Alzheimer's. Their are no drug interactions in taking the two together.
Yes, Ambien and Laxatives can be taken together, they do not have any adverse reaction together. However, it is not suggested because when taking Ambien a person needs at least 8 hours to sleep, and laxatives can interrupt those hours.
Sadly I've been down this road. MDMA, which has the side effect of insomnia and Ambien, which is a light sedative, do not go together AT ALL. They counteract each other and you wind up sweating or feeling/looking flushed and weak.
Yes, I've been taking ambien for over a year, and yesterday I was prescribed allegra, ny doctor said there wouldn't be a problem
I would not recommend it. Zanaflex has a side-effect of causing sleepiness, and Ambien is a sleep aid itself. I recommend that you discuss this with a pharmacist or with your doctor before taking these drugs together.
I just asked a Pharmacist the exact question and she told me, "yes". Its not the ALEVE that's the problem its the AMBIEN. She could not express enough how important it is to have at least 7-8 hours to dedicate to sleeping before taking an AMBIEN. JUST FOR SAFETY MEASURE AND PURPOSES I WOULD CALL YOUR LOCAL PHARMACIST AND ASK HIM/HER BEFORE TAKING ANY MEDICATION COMBINATIONS. BETTER TO BE SAFE THAN SORRY!!!!
There are no known drug interactions between Plan B and Ambien.
No. Ambien is a sleep aid, so it is made to help you sleep. Tussionex is a cough medication, but it is a controlled drug. It will make you very sleepy. Taking the two together can decrease your heart rate and could be fatal.
Yes I am taking both.
Adderall lasts for like 6-8 hrs, so anytime after that's good. The Ambien can actually help you come off the Adderall and get to sleep (obvi :]). Of course, if you wanna have some fun, someone who isn't me ;) finds that taking them together is rather exquisite.
Taking Ambien causes a host of withdrawal symptoms including seizures, sweats, muscle cramps, and shaking in the long-term.