SAFE — No Known Interaction
🟢 SAFE — Dicyclomine and Vitamin E can be taken together safely.
Evidence level: MODERATE
Dicyclomine and Vitamin E are generally considered safe to use together. No adverse interactions have been reported in medical literature.
No clinically significant interaction between Dicyclomine and Vitamin E has been identified in medical literature.
No interaction documented between Dicyclomine and Vitamin E. Always inform your healthcare provider about everything you take.
Take Dicyclomine as prescribed. Vitamin E with a meal (fat-containing if it's a fat-soluble vitamin: A, D, E, or K). Space 1-2 hours apart for clean absorption. Vitamins rarely cause dramatic drug interactions, but always inform your pharmacist about your full supplement regimen.
Higher risk for: elderly, those with liver or kidney impairment, polypharmacy (5+ medications), recent medication changes, or those with multiple chronic conditions. Consult your pharmacist for specific risk factors.
Monitor for altered medication effects when combining Dicyclomine with Vitamin E. Certain vitamins (especially A, D, E, K, and B-complex) can interact with prescription medications through absorption or metabolic pathways. Watch for: digestive changes, headache, unusual fatigue or energy, or changes in medication effectiveness. When to seek emergency help: Signs of vitamin toxicity (severe headache, confusion, bone pain for vitamin D; easy bleeding for vitamin E), or severe allergic reaction.
No urgent discussion needed, but keep your provider informed. Say: "I take Dicyclomine alongside Vitamin E — anything I should know?"
Safe combination at standard doses. Continue your medication as prescribed. Inform your doctor or pharmacist that you are using both, so they can monitor for any changes over time.
Dicyclomine and Vitamin E are generally considered safe to use together. No adverse interactions have been reported in medical literature.
Take Dicyclomine as prescribed. Vitamin E with a meal (fat-containing if it's a fat-soluble vitamin: A, D, E, or K). Space 1-2 hours apart for clean absorption. Vitamins rarely cause dramatic drug interactions, but always inform your pharmacist about your full supplement regimen.
Monitor for altered medication effects when combining Dicyclomine with Vitamin E. Certain vitamins (especially A, D, E, K, and B-complex) can interact with prescription medications through absorption or metabolic pathways. Watch for: digestive changes, headache, unusual fatigue or energy, or changes in medication effectiveness. When to seek emergency help: Signs of vitamin toxicity (severe headache, confusion, bone pain for vitamin D; easy bleeding for vitamin E), or severe allergic reaction.
Safe combination at standard doses. Continue your medication as prescribed. Inform your doctor or pharmacist that you are using both, so they can monitor for any changes over time.
No urgent discussion needed, but keep your provider informed. Say: "I take Dicyclomine alongside Vitamin E — anything I should know?"
Or browse the full interaction database (121,000+ pairs).