Posted by Janelle on March 13, 2002, at 19:24:50
I was VERY impressed by an answer you gave to one of my previous posts (took forever for me to find the darn thing) --- you said to me: "You are right that Serzone could be sedating and so combining it with Seroquel may compound this problem. This is not only due to pharmacodynamic drug interaction (additional effect on the site of action) but also pharmacokinetic drug interaction (Serzone potently inhibits the metabolism of Seroquel via CYP3A4 enzyme)."
My QUESTION 4 U is how do you know this stuff? You used technical terms, but also explained it in words that I could understand so I'm wondering if you have some kind of medical background? Thanks.
poster:Janelle
thread:97833
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20020313/msgs/97833.html