SAFE — No Known Interaction
🟢 SAFE — Atorvastatin and Black Tea can be taken together safely.
Evidence level: LIMITED
Atorvastatin and Black Tea are generally safe to use together. No adverse interactions have been reported.
No clinically significant interaction between Atorvastatin and Black Tea has been documented in medical literature.
No dietary interaction between Atorvastatin and Black Tea. You can consume both without concern.
Take Atorvastatin in the evening. CRITICAL: Grapefruit and grapefruit juice inhibit CYP3A4 and can dramatically increase blood levels of atorvastatin, lovastatin, and simvastatin — this raises rhabdomyolysis risk. Pravastatin and rosuvastatin are less affected. Black Tea can be consumed normally unless it is grapefruit.
Higher risk for: those with liver impairment, genetic CYP enzyme variations (poor or ultra-rapid metabolizers), elderly, those on multiple CYP3A4 inhibitors, high-dose statin therapy, or history of myopathy.
Monitor for muscle and liver effects when combining Atorvastatin with Black Tea. Watch for: unexplained muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness (especially if accompanied by fever or fatigue), dark-colored urine, yellowing of skin or eyes, or upper abdominal pain. Some drug combinations increase statin blood levels and raise the risk of rhabdomyolysis. When to seek emergency help: Severe muscle pain with weakness, dark brown urine, fever, confusion, rapid heartbeat, or signs of kidney failure (very little or no urination). Report any new muscle symptoms to your prescriber immediately.
No urgent discussion needed. Keep your provider informed of your full supplement list.
Safe combination. No dietary restrictions needed. Maintaining a consistent diet helps ensure predictable supplement and medication performance.
Atorvastatin and Black Tea are generally safe to use together. No adverse interactions have been reported.
Take Atorvastatin in the evening. CRITICAL: Grapefruit and grapefruit juice inhibit CYP3A4 and can dramatically increase blood levels of atorvastatin, lovastatin, and simvastatin — this raises rhabdomyolysis risk. Pravastatin and rosuvastatin are less affected. Black Tea can be consumed normally unless it is grapefruit.
Monitor for muscle and liver effects when combining Atorvastatin with Black Tea. Watch for: unexplained muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness (especially if accompanied by fever or fatigue), dark-colored urine, yellowing of skin or eyes, or upper abdominal pain. Some drug combinations increase statin blood levels and raise the risk of rhabdomyolysis. When to seek emergency help: Severe muscle pain with weakness, dark brown urine, fever, confusion, rapid heartbeat, or signs of kidney failure (very little or no urination). Report any new muscle symptoms to your prescriber immediately.
Safe combination. No dietary restrictions needed. Maintaining a consistent diet helps ensure predictable supplement and medication performance.
No urgent discussion needed. Keep your provider informed of your full supplement list.
Or browse the full interaction database (121,000+ pairs).