Home » Health » The Risks of Combining Medication and Exercise: A Look at Lipid-Lowering Drugs, Anti-Allergy Medicine, and Hypoglycemic Agents.

The Risks of Combining Medication and Exercise: A Look at Lipid-Lowering Drugs, Anti-Allergy Medicine, and Hypoglycemic Agents.

[VoiceofHopeApril192023](Editor: Li Wenhan) lipid-lowering drugs

The common adverse reaction of lipid-lowering drugs, such as statins, is rhabdomyolysis. Strenuous exercise after taking such drugs may cause muscle pain in some cases, accompanied by an increase in creatine kinase, and may even induce rhabdomyolysis.

Allergy medicine (pixabay)

anti allergy medicine

More commonly used anti-allergic drugs, such as chlorpheniramine, loratadine, cetirizine, etc., will have symptoms such as drowsiness and unresponsiveness after taking them. If you exercise after taking them, you may experience dizziness, attention Insufficient concentration and other situations, resulting in sports risks.

Dizziness (PhotoAC)
Dizziness (PhotoAC)

Hypoglycemic agents

Hypoglycemic drugs combined with appropriate aerobic exercise can effectively improve our hypoglycemic effect, but the main function of this type of drug is to maintain our blood sugar after meals. If we take the drug and perform high-intensity exercise, it may cause hypoglycemia and dizziness , fatigue, sweating, trembling, irritability, disorientation, staring at the eyes, etc. In severe cases, coma may even occur.

Editor in charge: Li Zhi

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2023-04-19 09:22:01


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#exercise #immediately #medicines #easy #accidents #Antihyperlipidemic #Drugs #Antiallergic #Drugs #Hypoglycemic #Drugs #exercise #immediately #Accident #prone

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