Skip to main content
Evidence-Based Supplement Research
Evidence-Based Supplement Research

Request for Top Interactive Supplements with Meloxicam Ranked by Publications

The user requested a ranked list of the top 20 supplements interacting with meloxicam, ordered by number of publications with interaction strength scores. The assistant explained that Pillser's database does not contain drug-supplement interaction data, offered general pharmacological knowledge, and redirected the user to external resources like Drugs.com or PubMed.


  • Using data as of September 26, 2024, list the top 20 interactive supplements for meloxicam ranked by number of publications, with counts and interaction strength.

  • I apologize, but I was unable to find the specific data you're requesting in Pillser's research database. My tools did not return any results for meloxicam interactions with supplements, nor could I find a precompiled list ranked by number of publications with interaction counts and strength ratings as of September 26, 2024.

    Here's what I can tell you based on general pharmacological knowledge: Meloxicam is an NSAID (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug), and supplements that affect bleeding risk, platelet function, or liver metabolism are often flagged for potential interactions. Common supplements with theoretical interactions include:

    • Ginkgo biloba – may increase bleeding risk
    • Garlic – may increase bleeding risk
    • Fish oil (Omega-3s) – may increase bleeding risk
    • Turmeric/Curcumin – may have antiplatelet effects
    • Vitamin E – may increase bleeding risk
    • St. John's Wort – may affect liver enzyme metabolism
    • Ginger – may increase bleeding risk
    • Ginseng – may affect bleeding risk
    • Green tea – contains vitamin K
    • Dong Quai, Feverfew, Willow bark, Devil's Claw, and others

    However, I do not have a dataset that ranks these by number of publications or provides interaction strength scores as you requested. The Pillser research database focuses on supplement-health outcome relationships rather than drug-supplement interaction rankings.

    You may want to consult a resource like Drugs.com interaction checker, PubMed, or Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database for a ranked, evidence-based list of supplement interactions with meloxicam. If you'd like to search for supplement products on Pillser related to a specific ingredient, I'd be happy to help with that.

  • I apologize, but I was unable to find the specific data you're requesting. Pillser's research database does not contain a dataset on drug-supplement interactions for meloxicam, and no ranked list of the "top 20 interactive supplements" by publication count with interaction strength scores is available through my tools.

    Here's what I can share from general pharmacological knowledge:

    Meloxicam is a prescription NSAID (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug). It is metabolized primarily by the liver enzyme CYP2C9 and to a lesser extent by CYP3A4. Supplements that interact with these same pathways, or that affect bleeding risk, may theoretically interact.

    Common supplements with potential interactions include:

    SupplementPotential Concern
    Ginkgo bilobaMay increase bleeding risk
    Fish oil / Omega-3sMay increase bleeding risk
    GarlicMay increase bleeding risk
    Turmeric / CurcuminMay have antiplatelet effects
    Vitamin EMay increase bleeding risk
    GingerMay increase bleeding risk
    GinsengMay affect platelet function
    St. John's WortMay induce CYP enzymes, reducing meloxicam levels
    Green teaContains vitamin K (antagonizes warfarin-like effects)
    Dong QuaiMay increase bleeding risk
    FeverfewMay increase bleeding risk
    Willow BarkContains salicylates (additive NSAID effect)
    Devil's ClawMay increase bleeding risk
    BilberryMay affect platelet aggregation
    BromelainMay increase bleeding risk
    Reishi mushroomMay affect platelet function
    PolicosanolMay affect platelet function
    Horse chestnutMay increase bleeding risk
    Milk thistleMay inhibit CYP enzymes
    AshwagandhaMay affect thyroid/hormonal pathways

    However, I cannot provide a ranked list by publication count or interaction strength scores because my tools do not have access to that specific dataset.

    If you'd like to search for supplement products on Pillser containing any specific ingredient (e.g., fish oil, turmeric), I'd be happy to help. Otherwise, for a fully ranked and cited list of drug-supplement interactions, I'd recommend consulting specialized interaction databases such as the Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database or Drugs.com.

  • I apologize, but I am unable to fulfill this request. Pillser's research database does not contain a dataset of drug-supplement interactions for meloxicam ranked by publication count with interaction strength scores. My queries returned no matching data.

    If you'd like, I can help with:

    • Searching for supplement products on Pillser for specific ingredients you're interested in.
    • Researching a specific supplement's effects on a health outcome via Pillser's database.

    Please let me know how I can assist further.

  • I understand you're looking for a specific ranked dataset of supplements that interact with meloxicam, but unfortunately, Pillser's research database does not contain drug-supplement interaction data of this kind. My queries for "meloxicam" and "supplement interactions" returned no results.

    Pillser's database is focused on supplement-health outcome relationships (e.g., "Vitamin D and bone health"), not on drug-supplement interaction databases ranked by publication count with interaction strength scores.

    To get the type of data you're looking for, I'd recommend consulting:

    • Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database – provides interaction severity ratings
    • Drugs.com Interaction Checker – ranks interactions by severity
    • PubMed – search for "meloxicam supplement interaction" to find publication counts

    If you're interested in any specific supplement and its relationship to a health outcome, I'd be happy to look that up in Pillser's database, or I can search for supplement products on Pillser if you'd like. Otherwise, I'm afraid I can't provide the ranked list you requested.

  • I apologize, but I am unable to fulfill this request. After querying Pillser's research database, no data was found on meloxicam supplement interactions ranked by publication count with interaction strength scores.

    Pillser's database is structured around supplement-to-health-outcome relationships (e.g., "Vitamin D and bone health"), not drug-supplement interaction datasets that would provide the kind of ranked list you're asking for.

    To find the data you're looking for (top interactive supplements ranked by number of publications with interaction counts and strength ratings), I'd recommend the following resources:

    • Drugs.com Interaction Checker – provides severity ratings for drug-supplement pairs
    • Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database – provides detailed interaction ratings with evidence grading
    • PubMed – searching for "meloxicam" AND ("herbal" OR "supplement") AND "interaction" to find publication counts per supplement

    If you're interested in a different type of query — such as a specific supplement's effects on a health condition, or a search for supplement products available on Pillser — I'd be happy to help. Please let me know!

  • I appreciate the request, but after querying Pillser's research database multiple times, I can confirm that no data is available on this topic. Pillser's database focuses on supplement-to-health-outcome relationships (e.g., how a supplement affects a health condition), not on drug-supplement interaction datasets with publication counts and interaction strength rankings.

    I do not have a precompiled list of the top 20 supplements interacting with meloxicam, ranked by publication count, with interaction strength scores, as of September 26, 2024 — and my tools cannot produce one.

    What I can help with instead:

    1. Research a specific supplement's effects on a health outcome (e.g., "What does research say about fish oil and inflammation?")
    2. Find supplement products on Pillser — just let me know which ingredients or attributes (e.g., "Vegan fish oil", "Gluten-free turmeric") you're looking for, and I'll search for them.

    Would you like to ask a different question that I can look up?

Browse Related Questions

Back to top