Supplements and antipsychotics.
Antipsychotics (quetiapine, olanzapine, risperidone, aripiprazole and others) have a relatively contained supplement-interaction surface. There are no hard-exclusion supplements with this class in our database, but a few patterns are worth knowing.
The main ones are additive: sedating supplements (valerian, melatonin, high-dose magnesium) can add to the drowsiness of the more sedating antipsychotics, and St John’s Wort speeds up the CYP enzymes that clear several of these drugs, which can lower their level and work against them. One specific caution is vitex (chasteberry) with risperidone: vitex has dopamine activity, the same system risperidone works on, so in theory it could work against the drug, though this has not been shown clinically. As with any psychiatric medicine, run new supplements past your prescriber.
How we grade severity, choose what's in scope, and what we exclude.
Every call on this page is reasoned. We publish the full rubric for severity tiers, the medication inclusion logic, the evidence grades we accept, and what we deliberately leave out. About three thousand words. Worth reading once if you use this tool more than occasionally.
Read the full methodologyWant this checked across everything you take?
This page checks the pairs you enter. The personalised Distil report goes further:
- the same graded, cited interaction check across your whole stack, not just the pairs you thought to type in
- where your current routine may be leaving you short of your goals
- the evidence-backed compounds worth adding, and the ones worth dropping
It's a paid report: £79, or £49 for the first 25 customers. The interactions check is one section of it, and you can read a real one in full before you buy.
See a real sample reportSomething missing?
If a supplement or medication you take isn't in our autocomplete, tell us. We go through what people flag every week and add what's missing.