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    • SELEGILINE HCL

    • QTY 30
    • 5 MG
    • Tablet
    • Near  77381

SELEGILINE (se LE ji leen) treats the symptoms of Parkinson disease in people who are taking Levodopa. It works by increasing the amount of dopamine in your brain, a substance which helps manage body movements and coordination. This reduces the symptoms of Parkinson, such as body stiffness and tremors. It belongs to a group of medications called MAOIs.


SELEGILINE HCL Lifestyle Interactions

  • Selegiline Hydrochloride 5mg, Oral tablet

    Interaction: Cannabis
    Severity: Major
    Notes for Consumers: Discuss cannabis use with your care team. The effects of your medication may be altered if used with cannabis. Call emergency services right away if you experience slow or shallow breathing, shortness of breath, feeling faint, dizziness, confusion, or trouble staying awake.
    Notes for Professionals: Advise patients to avoid cannabis use while taking CNS depressants due to the risk for additive CNS depression and potential for other cognitive adverse reactions.
  • Selegiline Hydrochloride 5mg, Oral tablet

    Interaction: Alcohol
    Severity: Major
    Notes for Consumers: Do not drink alcohol while taking this medication. Drinking alcohol may alter the effects of your medication. Serious side effects may occur. Contact your care team if you experience new or worsening side effects.
    Notes for Professionals: Advise patients to avoid the use of alcohol or alcohol-containing products with selegiline. Use may cause additive CNS depression and some alcohol-containing products may also contain tyramine. Certain alcohol-containing beverages that are tyramine-rich can precipitate a hypertensive reaction if consumed by patients during therapy with selegiline. These include some beers; wines; sherry; hard liquor; or liqueurs.
  • Selegiline Hydrochloride 5mg, Oral tablet

    Interaction: Tyramine-containing foods
    Severity: Major
    Notes for Consumers: Most foods do not interact with selegiline. Certain foods that are rich in tyramine might increase the risk of side effects with selegiline. Follow all the instructions of your health care provider for your diet. You should probably limit your intake of aged or smoked meats (like sausages or smoked or pickled fish), aged cheeses, yeast extracts, and certain alcoholic beverages like tap beers. Taking these foods along with selegiline might increase the risk of high blood pressure or other side effects. Ask your dietician or health care professional for a complete listing of foods best avoided. If you eat foods very rich in tyramine and do not feel well soon after eating, contact your healthcare provider.
    Notes for Professionals: A diet low in tyramine content may be necessary to avoid this interaction. Patients should be informed not to exceed the recommended selegiline dose, follow dietary instructions, and should generally be instructed to avoid tyramine-rich foods. Selegiline is selective for MAO-B at recommended doses (2.5 to 12 mg/day). However, certain foods may contain very high amounts (i.e., 150 mg or greater) of tyramine and could potentially cause a hypertensive reaction in individual patients with increased sensitivity to tyramine. Food sources considered to be high in tyramine and that may interact with MAO inhibitors in general include Stilton aged cheese, concentrated yeast extracts (e.g., Marmite), aged meats, and sauerkraut. Ethanol ingestion of alcoholic beverages with high tyramine content (e.g., tap beers) also may place patients at risk. If a patient eats foods very rich in tyramine and does not feel well soon after eating, the patient should contact their healthcare provider. Patients should also be instructed to contact their healthcare provider if they experience severe headache, shortness of breath, palpitations, diaphoresis, chest pain or other symptoms suggestive of a significant hypertensive reaction or hypertensive crisis.

DISCLAIMER: This drug information content is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Patients should always consult their physician with any questions regarding a medical condition and to obtain medical advice and treatment. Drug information is sourced from GSDD (Gold Standard Drug Database ) provided by Elsevier.