SAFE — No Known Interaction
🟢 SAFE — Oxycodone and Manganese can be taken together safely.
Evidence level: LIMITED
Oxycodone and Manganese are generally considered safe to use together. No adverse interactions have been reported in medical literature.
No clinically significant interaction between Oxycodone and Manganese has been identified in medical literature.
No interaction documented between Oxycodone and Manganese. Always inform your healthcare provider about everything you take.
Take Manganese with food. Oxycodone at its prescribed times. Opioids slow gut motility, which can actually enhance mineral absorption but also worsen constipation. If supplementing iron or calcium (both constipating), add magnesium citrate to counteract — it has a gentle laxative effect.
Higher risk for: elderly, opioid-naive patients, those with sleep apnea, respiratory conditions, concurrent CNS depressants (benzodiazepines, alcohol), liver impairment, or history of substance use disorder.
Monitor for CNS depression and respiratory effects when combining Oxycodone with Manganese. Watch for: excessive drowsiness, slowed breathing, confusion, severe constipation, nausea, dizziness, or impaired coordination. Do not drive or operate machinery. When to seek emergency help: Breathing becomes slow or shallow, extreme drowsiness or inability to wake, blue lips or fingernails, severe confusion, or loss of consciousness. Keep naloxone (Narcan) accessible if prescribed opioids. Never mix with alcohol.
No urgent discussion needed, but keep your provider informed. Say: "I take Oxycodone alongside Manganese — anything I should know?"
Safe combination. Mineral absorption tip: take calcium and iron at separate times (they compete for absorption). Magnesium is best taken in the evening. Zinc pairs well with meals to prevent nausea. Vitamin C enhances iron absorption.
Oxycodone and Manganese are generally considered safe to use together. No adverse interactions have been reported in medical literature.
Take Manganese with food. Oxycodone at its prescribed times. Opioids slow gut motility, which can actually enhance mineral absorption but also worsen constipation. If supplementing iron or calcium (both constipating), add magnesium citrate to counteract — it has a gentle laxative effect.
Monitor for CNS depression and respiratory effects when combining Oxycodone with Manganese. Watch for: excessive drowsiness, slowed breathing, confusion, severe constipation, nausea, dizziness, or impaired coordination. Do not drive or operate machinery. When to seek emergency help: Breathing becomes slow or shallow, extreme drowsiness or inability to wake, blue lips or fingernails, severe confusion, or loss of consciousness. Keep naloxone (Narcan) accessible if prescribed opioids. Never mix with alcohol.
Safe combination. Mineral absorption tip: take calcium and iron at separate times (they compete for absorption). Magnesium is best taken in the evening. Zinc pairs well with meals to prevent nausea. Vitamin C enhances iron absorption.
No urgent discussion needed, but keep your provider informed. Say: "I take Oxycodone alongside Manganese — anything I should know?"
Or browse the full interaction database (121,000+ pairs).