All drugs interact differently for person to person. You should check all the possible interactions with your doctor before starting any medicine.
Description
Interaction with alcohol is unknown. It is advisable to consult your doctor before consumption.
Instructions
Interaction with alcohol is unknown. It is advisable to consult your doctor before consumption.
Interaction with Medicine
Disease interactions
Mononucleosis is also called as kissing disease is an infection caused by Epstein-Barr virus. It is spread through saliva. People with mononucleosis may develop a maculopapular skin rash (flat and small raised bumps on the skin) after 5-10 days of treatment with Aglomox 125 MG Dry Syrup and resolves within days of discontinuing the use. Aglomox 125 MG Dry Syrup may not be appropriate medicine in patients with mononucleosis.
Aglomox 125 MG Dry Syrup can kill the helpful bacteria in your stomach or intestine and leads to diarrhoea. Therefore use Aglomox 125 MG Dry Syrup with extreme caution in patients with gastrointestinal (mouth to anus) diseases, particularly colitis (swelling of the inner lining of the colon), since it may worsen the patient's condition.
Aglomox 125 MG Dry Syrup is filtered by the kidney and moved out of the body through urine. Patients with kidney diseases need special consideration while taking Aglomox 125 MG Dry Syrup due to the risk of kidney damage. Dose adjustment should be done based on the clinical condition.
Food interactions
Information not available.
Lab interactions
Aglomox 125 MG Dry Syrup is moved out from the body via urine. High urine concentrations of Aglomox 125 MG Dry Syrup might give a false-positive result for the urine sugar test (test to determine the presence of glucose). Inform your doctor or lab technician about the use of Aglomox 125 MG Dry Syrup before doing this test.
This is not an exhaustive list of possible drug interactions. You should consult your doctor about all the possible interactions of the drugs you’re taking.