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Vitamin supplements and Heart Medications

stargazerhelen profile image
15 Replies

Hi Everyone

After Heart Attack/two stents 18 mths ago I was prescribed usual meds and am still on (Aspirin/Amlopidine/Bisoprolol/Ramipril/Atorvastatin). I am considering taking one or more of the following vitamin supplements:-

Co-enzyme Q10/Magnesium/MSM

Unable to ask Cardiologist as appointment been cancelled yet again. Any advice/experience as to whether these will be beneficial or compromise the heart meds appreciated.

Thank you.

Stargazer Helen

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stargazerhelen profile image
stargazerhelen
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15 Replies

Dear stargazerhelen

Interesting question, but it is one that only your Cardiologist/ Drs can really advise you on.

For not only can supplements interfere with your medication, how your body processes the vitamins etc can be totally different.

I have to use supplements being a long term vegan and all of them were passed through the ok or not of my cardiologist { who I was lucky is also vegan } and I was surprised that some of what I was taking was at a to higher dose.

If you cant wait or get an appointment then your pharmacist will be of help, and please remember that all vitamins/supplements are not the same so do your homework on buying them. Quality over quantity.

Also what people forget is that a lot of them are fat soluble not water so you have to take fat with them or they will just pass through you.

Take care

stargazerhelen profile image
stargazerhelen in reply to

Dear Blue. Many thanks for your speedy reply, much appreciated.

citygirl65 profile image
citygirl65 in reply to

Yes used to take them for years menopace tablets then had to come off as iron levels too high...at least they work🤣anyway vegan too.

RufusScamp profile image
RufusScamp

Blue is right, do check with your docs or a pharmacist before you take any supplements. Can you contact the cardiology dept. to ask for advice? It's also worth reading carefully the leaflets that come with your meds. There are one or two things I am advised not to take with my particular combination of drugs.

MONIREN profile image
MONIREN

My cardiologist said no to Q10. But yes to Vit D. Once I asked Pharmacy about a supplement, even showed them my medication list, when I showed gp, it was red flagged as interacting with heart meds. Now I never take anything without clearing it with at least gp. Take care. Moni

Dessert profile image
Dessert

On You Tube there’s a British Cardiologist called Sanjay Gupta. He has a vid about the benefits of taking magnesium as a heart patient . His channel name is ‘York Cardiology’ .He is an amazing human being and a fantastic cardiologist-very knowledgeable

Milkfairy profile image
MilkfairyHeart Star in reply toDessert

I have met Dr Sanjay Gupta. He is very knowledgeable about some areas of Cardiology but not all.

Some of his video's about non obstructive coronary artery disease is inaccurate. I asked him to correct this information providing the latest research evidence......he hasn't changed anything.

Sprit profile image
Sprit in reply toMilkfairy

Nice to see fighting our corner with all who suffer with vasopastic angina. Take care.

Breesha profile image
Breesha

You cannot be too careful, I love liquorice, and my pharmacist sells bags of the Aussie type , and he refused to sell me some , you cannot have that you are on Digoxin …….WHO KNEW. Apparently really bad interaction between the two.So it’s not only supplements , there are interactions with food , we all know about Grapefruit ,but what else??

ss3k profile image
ss3k

co q10 *could* be overrated.

Milkfairy profile image
MilkfairyHeart Star

As others have suggested check with your pharmacist or Cardiologist.

Supplements do not go through the same rigorous testing, can vary in strength and contain other substances.

There are very few independently funded randomised controlled trials into the efficiency and safety of supplements.

You may end up spending alot of money for very little benefit.

Villagelife profile image
Villagelife

A pharmacist may be able to advise you.

Poppy451 profile image
Poppy451

Magnesium chloride is supposed to be the most absorbable form. It comes in a spray bottle sometimes called magnesium oil. You spray it allover the body. Or you can buy magnesium chloride bath salts. They use magnesium in the emergency department.It is very good for the heart.

stargazerhelen profile image
stargazerhelen

Many thanks to you all for your most helpful comments and advice. I will consult pharmacist/cardiologist (when I eventually get to see him) before introducing any supplements into the daily meds.

Drachen101 profile image
Drachen101

I agree that only your doctor can give you recommendations, so it would be better for you to wait until your next appointment. After I started to think about taking supplements, I checked the pages like gundrymdbiocomplete3.com/re... to learn people's feedback, but I still decided to ask my doctor to make sure everything would be fine.

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