Supplements and Metoclopramide hydrochloride.
Metoclopramide hydrochloride, sold under the brand name Maxolon, is classified under "drugs used in nausea and vertigo" in the BNF.
Metoclopramide hydrochloride (UK brand names Maxolon) sits at NHSBSA prescribing rank 181 in the 2024/25 PCA statistics. The BNF classifies it under "drugs used in nausea and vertigo". This means it sits outside the high-volume therapeutic classes (statins, PPIs, ACE inhibitors, SSRIs) where supplement-interaction surfaces are densely studied, and the published evidence base for specific supplement pairs is correspondingly thinner. Where interactions are documented in the Distil database, they are listed below with their clinical-reference citation; where pairs have not been explicitly assessed, the missing-item form at the bottom of the page routes them into our next curation pass. Anyone combining Metoclopramide hydrochloride with a regular supplement stack benefits from explicit GP or pharmacist awareness rather than assuming no interaction exists by default.
Below are the 1 documented pair we have explicitly assessed against Metoclopramide hydrochloride in the Distil database: 1 amber. The pairs cluster around 1 mechanism: Reduced antipsychotic effect. Every call is cited to either a clinical reference (PMID) or the British National Formulary. Anything not on this list is either still to be assessed or beyond our database scope. The checker beneath surfaces assessments by supplement, and the missing-item form at the bottom of the page routes any uncatalogued supplement into our next curation pass.
Documented interactions
Reduced antipsychotic effect
Metoclopramide works partly by blocking dopamine to settle nausea, and vitex (chasteberry) gently acts on the same dopamine system in the opposite direction, so in theory it could blunt the effect. This matters most if you take metoclopramide regularly rather than as a one-off. If in doubt, mention vitex to your prescriber.
Reviewer-flagged: awaiting clinical-reviewer sign-off.
What this list does not say. Pairs not flagged here are not implicitly safe. They are either not yet in our database, or fall outside our inclusion scope (food-supplement interactions only; for drug-drug interactions, the BNF is authoritative). Use the checker below to surface any supplement, and submit a missing item if you take something we have not catalogued.
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.