SAFE — No Known Interaction
🟢 SAFE — NAC and Pregabalin can be taken together safely.
Evidence level: LIMITED
NAC and Pregabalin are safe to take together. No adverse interactions have been reported in medical literature.
No clinically significant interaction between NAC and Pregabalin has been documented in medical literature or FDA drug labeling.
No interaction between NAC and Pregabalin has been documented. As a best practice, keep a list of everything you take — including NAC — and share it with your healthcare provider at every visit. This helps them spot potential issues early.
Take Pregabalin at exact consistent times. NAC between meals. L-carnitine is specifically recommended with valproic acid. Avoid high-dose glutamate or aspartate — these are excitatory neurotransmitter precursors that could theoretically lower seizure threshold. GABA and taurine have calming properties.
Higher risk for: those on multiple antiepileptics (enzyme induction/inhibition), liver impairment, elderly, pregnant individuals (teratogenicity concerns), or those with recent dose changes.
Monitor seizure control and medication side effects when combining NAC with Pregabalin. Watch for: increased seizure frequency, unusual drowsiness, dizziness, coordination problems, blurred or double vision, tremors, difficulty concentrating, or mood changes. Drug interactions can raise or lower antiepileptic blood levels. When to seek emergency help: Seizure lasting more than 5 minutes, clusters of seizures, difficulty breathing after a seizure, severe rash (especially with fever or blisters), severe dizziness or fainting, or signs of liver problems (yellowing skin, dark urine, severe nausea).
No urgent need to discuss, but always keep your doctor informed of your full supplement and medication list. An up-to-date list helps them make the best treatment decisions.
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.
NAC and Pregabalin are safe to take together. No adverse interactions have been reported in medical literature.
Take Pregabalin at exact consistent times. NAC between meals. L-carnitine is specifically recommended with valproic acid. Avoid high-dose glutamate or aspartate — these are excitatory neurotransmitter precursors that could theoretically lower seizure threshold. GABA and taurine have calming properties.
Monitor seizure control and medication side effects when combining NAC with Pregabalin. Watch for: increased seizure frequency, unusual drowsiness, dizziness, coordination problems, blurred or double vision, tremors, difficulty concentrating, or mood changes. Drug interactions can raise or lower antiepileptic blood levels. When to seek emergency help: Seizure lasting more than 5 minutes, clusters of seizures, difficulty breathing after a seizure, severe rash (especially with fever or blisters), severe dizziness or fainting, or signs of liver problems (yellowing skin, dark urine, severe nausea).
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 need to discuss, but always keep your doctor informed of your full supplement and medication list. An up-to-date list helps them make the best treatment decisions.
Or browse the full interaction database (121,000+ pairs).