Drilldown: Medicines
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Antidepressant
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Benzodiazepine
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[[:Category:Anticoagulants|Anticoagulant]] 
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Antidepressant
or
Benzodiazepine
or
[[:Category:Anticoagulants|Anticoagulant]] 
Use the filters below to narrow your results.
generic:
None (10) ·
Anafranil (1) ·
Aurorix (1) ·
Coumadin (discontinued in US but name in common use), Jantoven (1) ·
Cymbalta, Drizalma Sprinkle, Irenka, Yentreve (1) ·
Dalmane (1) ·
Doral (1) ·
Edronax (1) ·
Eliquis (1) ·
Fetzima (1) ·
Halcion (1) ·
Lexotan (1) ·
Librium (1) ·
Ludiomil (1) ·
Marplan (1) ·
Mogadon (1) ·
Nardil (1) ·
Norpramin (1) ·
Onfi (1) ·
Parnate (1) ·
ProSom (1) ·
Restoril (1) ·
Rohypnol (1) ·
Savella (1) ·
Serax (1) ·
Serzone (1) ·
Stablon (1) ·
Surmontil (1) ·
Tofranil (1) ·
Tranxene (1) ·
Valdoxan (1) ·
Versed (1) ·
Vivactil (1) ·
Xanax (1) ·
Xarelto (1) ·
Zoloft (1)
None (1) ·
Extremely potent GABAA positive allosteric modulator (1) ·
GABA-A positive allosteric modulator'"`UNIQ--ref-00000067-QINU`"' '"`UNIQ--vote-00000068-QINU`"' (1) ·
GABAA positive allosteric modulator (18) ·
GABAA positive allosteric modulator; low sedation (1) ·
GABAA positive allosteric modulator; prodrug of desmethyldiazepam (1) ·
GABAA positive allosteric modulator; very long half-life (1) ·
Irreversible non-selective MAO inhibitor (3) ·
Melatonin receptor agonist; 5-HT2C antagonist (1) ·
Mu-opioid agonist; modulates glutamate AMPA receptors (1) ·
Potent serotonin reuptake inhibitor; also NRI (1) ·
Reversible inhibitor of MAO-A (1) ·
Selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (3) ·
Serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (3) ·
Serotonin reuptake inhibitor and 5-HT2A antagonist (1) ·
Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibition (balanced) (1) ·
Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (2) ·
TrkB/BDNF'"`UNIQ--ref-00000084-QINU`"' '"`UNIQ--vote-00000085-QINU`"' (1) ·
Weak SRI; primarily H1/D2/alpha antagonist (1) ·
'"`UNIQ--vote-000001F6-QINU`"' CYP3A4 (primary) and P-glycoprotein substrate; strong dual inhibitors or inducers materially shift exposure. Reversal: andexanet alfa for life-threatening bleeding; 4F-PCC commonly used off-label when andexanet unavailable'"`UNIQ--ref-000001F7-QINU`"'. (1) ·
'"`UNIQ--vote-0000050D-QINU`"' CYP3A4 (primary) and P-glycoprotein substrate; strong dual inhibitors or inducers materially shift exposure. Reversal: andexanet alfa for life-threatening bleeding; 4F-PCC commonly used off-label when andexanet unavailable'"`UNIQ--ref-0000050E-QINU`"'. (1)
None (40) ·
Depression, anxiety, neuropathic pain, fibromyalgia, chronic musculoskeletal pain (1) ·
'"`UNIQ--vote-0000001B-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-0000001C-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-0000001D-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-0000001E-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-0000001F-QINU`"' (1) ·
'"`UNIQ--vote-00000069-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-0000006A-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-0000006B-QINU`"' (1) ·
'"`UNIQ--vote-000001F8-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-000001F9-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-000001FA-QINU`"' (1) ·
'"`UNIQ--vote-0000050F-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00000510-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00000511-QINU`"', '"`UNIQ--vote-00000512-QINU`"' (1)
None (40) ·
0.25 mg (1) ·
25 mg (1) ·
NVAF: 20 mg PO once daily with the evening meal (15 mg if CrCl 15-50); acute VTE: 15 mg BID for 21 days, then 20 mg daily; CAD/PAD: 2.5 mg BID with aspirin (1) ·
NVAF: 5 mg PO BID (2.5 mg BID if 2 of 3: age ≥80, weight ≤60 kg, serum creatinine ≥1.5 mg/dL); acute VTE: 10 mg BID for 7 days, then 5 mg BID (1) ·
Typical 5 mg PO daily; 2.5 mg in elderly, low body weight, malnutrition, hepatic dysfunction. Genotype-guided initial dosing per CPIC/IWPC algorithms (CYP2C9, VKORC1, CYP4F2) is one of the most-established PGx applications in current practice (1)
None (40) ·
0.25 mg, 0.5 mg, 1 mg, 2 mg tablets (immediate-release and orally disintegrating); 0.5 mg, 1 mg, 2 mg, 3 mg extended-release tablets; 1 mg/mL oral concentrate (1) ·
1, 2, 2.5, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.5, 10 mg tablets (color-coded by strength) (1) ·
2.5 mg, 5 mg tablets (1) ·
2.5, 10, 15, 20 mg tablets (1) ·
25 mg, 50 mg, 100 mg tablets; oral concentrate 20 mg/mL (1)
None (39) ·
30-60 min (immediate-release); 1-2 h (extended-release) (1) ·
Anticoagulant effect at 24-72 hours; full INR effect 5-7 days (1) ·
Anxiolysis classically 3-4 weeks, continuing improvement to 8-12 weeks (1) ·
Mood: 2–4 weeks. Pain: often within 1–2 weeks. (1) ·
Peak anticoagulant effect 2-4 hours (1) ·
Peak anticoagulant effect 3-4 hours (1)
None (39) ·
11-13 h (immediate-release); 11-16 h (extended-release) (1) ·
36-42 hours (R/S enantiomers differ; S-warfarin is 2-5× more potent and cleared by CYP2C9)'"`UNIQ--ref-00000020-QINU`"' (1) ·
5-9 hours (elderly: 11-13 hours)'"`UNIQ--ref-00000513-QINU`"' (1) ·
~12 hours (1) ·
~12 hours'"`UNIQ--ref-000001FB-QINU`"' (1) ·
~26 h (sertraline; range 13-45 h, longer in females); ~62-104 h (N-desmethylsertraline, weakly active) (1)
None (39) ·
80-90% oral (1) ·
Absolute bioavailability not precisely characterized; food modestly increases exposure (1) ·
~100% (oral)'"`UNIQ--ref-00000021-QINU`"' (1) ·
~50% (highly variable) (1) ·
~50% (oral; not significantly affected by food)'"`UNIQ--ref-000001FC-QINU`"' (1) ·
~80-100% with food at 15-20 mg doses (10 mg dose: ~80% without food); '''must be taken with food''' at therapeutic doses'"`UNIQ--ref-00000514-QINU`"' (1)
None (40) ·
'''Contraindicated in pregnancy''' (warfarin embryopathy, fetal hemorrhage) except in mechanical mitral valves where the maternal mortality of alternative agents may exceed fetal risk.'"`UNIQ--ref-00000022-QINU`"' (1) ·
Avoid in pregnancy; switch to LMWH. Crosses placenta; warfarin-class concerns about fetal hemorrhage and teratogenicity make heparins the preferred class.<sup class="pcp-cn" title="This claim needs a citation.">[[[Pharmacopedia:Citation needed|citation needed]]]</sup> (1) ·
Category C (1) ·
Category C'"`UNIQ--ref-0000008F-QINU`"' (1) ·
Category D'"`UNIQ--ref-0000006C-QINU`"' (1)
Showing below up to 45 results in range #1 to #45.

