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Triazole antifungal

Fluconazole with antacids and acid blockers

Antacids and acid-blocking medications (PPIs like omeprazole, H2 blockers like ranitidine or famotidine) are widely used and can subtly affect the absorption of medications taken alongside them. For Fluconazole (Fluconazole) at 50mg, 100mg, 150mg, 200mg, the impact depends on how Fluconazole is absorbed and whether gastric pH plays a role.

How antacids affect Fluconazole

Antacids work locally to neutralise gastric acid; PPIs and H2 blockers reduce acid secretion over hours. Some medications need an acidic stomach for proper dissolution and absorption — for these, co-administration with PPIs reduces effective dose. Other medications absorb fine regardless of pH. Whether Fluconazole is pH-sensitive is in the prescribing information. Fluconazole is a triazole antifungal that inhibits the cytochrome P450-dependent enzyme lanosterol 14-alpha-demethylase, blocking the synthesis of ergosterol from lanosterol.

Practical guidance

According to general pharmacy practice, separating antacid doses from Fluconazole by 2 hours avoids most direct binding interactions. PPIs and H2 blockers, taken on their own schedule, do not need timing separation but can shift Fluconazole absorption over weeks of co-use. The pharmacist confirms whether Fluconazole at 50mg, 100mg, 150mg, 200mg is affected.

Frequently asked questions

Can I take antacids with Fluconazole?

Yes for most users, but separating the doses by 2 hours minimises any direct interaction with Fluconazole at 50mg, 100mg, 150mg, 200mg. Some medications bind to antacid components and absorb less effectively if taken simultaneously.

Will my PPI affect Fluconazole?

For most Triazole antifungal medications, no clinically meaningful interaction. For pH-sensitive active ingredients, chronic PPI use can reduce absorption of Fluconazole; the prescriber may consider an alternative or a dose adjustment if this applies to Fluconazole.

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