Health Library Home>Natural & Alternative Treatments>Drug Interactions>Article

Pentoxifylline

Trade Names:

Trental

Pentoxifylline, a drug that makes the blood less "sticky," is used to increase blood circulation in conditions such as intermittent claudication (a possible complication of atherosclerosis in which impaired blood circulation causes severe pain in calf muscles during walking or exercising).

Interaction

Substance: Chondroitin

Effect: Possible Harmful Interaction

Based on chondroitin’s chemical similarity to the anticoagulant drug heparin, it has been suggested that chondroitin might have anticoagulant effects as well. There are no case reports of any problems relating to this, and studies suggest that chondroitin has at most a mild anticoagulant effect.16 Nonetheless, prudence suggests that chondroitin should not be combined with pentoxifylline except under physician supervision.

Interaction

Substance: Garlic , Ginkgo

Effect: Possible Harmful Interaction

The herb garlic (Allium sativum) is taken to lower cholesterol, among many other proposed uses.

One of the possible side effects of garlic is an increased tendency to bleed.1,2 Therefore, you should not combine garlic and pentoxifylline except under medical supervision.

The herb ginkgo (Ginkgo biloba) has been used to treat Alzheimer's disease and ordinary age-related memory loss, among many other uses.

Ginkgo appears to reduce the ability of platelets (blood-clotting cells) to stick together.3 Several case reports suggest that this blood-thinning effect of ginkgo may be associated with an increased risk of serious abnormal bleeding episodes in individuals taking the herb.4,5,6

Because of these risks, you should not combine ginkgo and pentoxifylline without physician supervision.

Interaction

Substance: PC-SPES

Effect: Possible Harmful Interaction

PC-SPES is an herbal combination that has shown promise for the treatment of prostate cancer. One case report suggests that PC-SPES might increase risk of bleeding complications if combined with blood-thinning medications.11 Subsequent evidence has indicated that PC-SPES contains the strong prescription blood-thinner warfarin (Coumadin), making this interaction inevitable.15

Interaction

Substance: Policosanol

Effect: Possible Harmful Interaction

The supplement policosanal is used to reduce cholesterol levels. It also intereferes with platelet clumping, creating a risk of interactions with blood-thinning drugs.

For example, a 30-day, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of 27 individuals with high cholesterol levels found that policosanol at 10 mg daily markedly reduced the ability of blood platelets to clump together.8 Another double-blind placebo-controlled study of 37 healthy volunteers found evidence that the blood-thinning effect of policosanol increased as the dose was increased—the larger the policosanol dose, the greater the effect.9 Yet another double-blind placebo-controlled study of 43 healthy volunteers compared the effects of policosanol (20 mg daily), the blood-thinner aspirin (100 mg daily), and policosanol and aspirin combined at these same doses.10 The results again showed that policosanol substantially reduced the ability of blood platelets to stick together, and that the combined therapy exhibited additive effects.

Based on these findings, you should not combine pentoxifylline and policosanol except under medical supervision.

Interaction

Substance: Reishi

Effect: Possible Harmful Interaction

One study suggests that reishi impairs platelet clumping.12 This creates the potential for an interaction with any blood-thinning medication.

Interaction

Substance: Vinpocetine

Effect: Possible Harmful Interaction

The substance vinpocetine is sold as a dietary supplement for the treatment of age-related memory loss and impaired mental function.

Vinpocetine is thought to inhibit blood platelets from forming clots.13 For this reason, it should not be combined with medications or natural substances that impair the blood’s ability to clot normally as this may lead to excessive bleeding. One study found only a minimal interaction between the blood-thinning drug warfarin (Coumadin) and vinpocetine, but prudence dictates caution anyway.14

Interaction

Substance: White Willow

Effect: Possible Harmful Interaction

The herb white willow (Salix alba), also known as willow bark, is used to treat pain and fever. White willow contains a substance that is converted by the body into a salicylate similar to the blood-thinner aspirin. For this reason, white willow might add to the effects of pentoxifylline, possibly thinning the blood too much.

It may be advisable to avoid white willow while taking pentoxifylline except under medical supervision.

Interaction

Substance: Herbs and Supplements

Effect: Possible Harmful Interaction

Herbs and supplements that impair the blood's ability to coagulate (clot) might add to the effects of pentoxifylline, possibly increasing the risk of excessive bleeding. This includes most prominently vitamin E.

Numerous other substances could conceivably present this risk, including mesoglycan, bromelain (from the fruit and stem of pineapple, Ananas comosus), chamomile(Matricaria recutita), Coleus forskohlii, danshen (Salvia miltorrhiza), dong quai(Angelica sinensis), feverfew(Tanacetum parthenium), fish oil, ginger(Zingiber officinale), horse chestnut(Aesculus hippocastanum), OPCs (oligomeric proanthocyanidins), papaya (Carica papaya), and red clover(Trifolium pratense).

 

References

1. Gadkari JV, Joshi VD. Effect of ingestion of raw garlic on serum cholesterol level, clotting time and fibrinolytic activity in normal subjects. J Postgrad Med. 1991;37:128-131.

2. Burnham BE. Garlic as a possible risk for postoperative bleeding. Plast Reconstr Surg. 1995;95:213.

3. Chung KF, Dent G, McCusker M, et al. Effect of a ginkgolide mixture (BN 52063) in antagonising skin and platelet responses to platelet activating factor in man. Lancet. 1987;1:248-251.

4. Rosenblatt M, Mindel J. Spontaneous hyphema associated with ingestion of Ginkgo biloba extract [letter]. N Engl J Med. 1997;336:1108.

5. Rowin J, Lewis SL. Spontaneous bilateral subdural hematomas with chronic Ginkgo biloba ingestion. Neurology. 1996;46:1775-1776.

6. Vale S. Subarachnoid hemorrhage associated with Ginkgo biloba [letter]. Lancet. 1998;352:36.

7. Arruzazabala ML, Mas R, Molina V, et al. Effect of policosanol on platelet aggregation in type II hypercholesterolemic patients. Int J Tissue React. 1998;20:119–124.

8. Arruzazabala ML, Mas R, Molina V, et al. Effect of policosanol on platelet aggregation in type II hypercholesterolemic patients. Int J Tissue React. 1998;20:119–124.

9. Arruzazabala ML, Valdes S, Mas R, et al. Effect of policosanol successive dose increases on platelet aggregation in healthy volunteers. Pharmacol Res. 1996;34:181–185.

10. Arruzazabala ML, Valdes S, Mas R, et al. Comparative study of policosanol, aspirin and the combination therapy policosanol-aspirin on platelet aggregation in healthy volunteers. Pharmacol Res. 1997;36:293–297.

11. Weinrobe MC, Montgomery B. Acquired bleeding diathesis in a patient taking PC-SPES [letter]. N Engl J Med. 2001;345:1213–1214.

12. Su C, Shiao M, Wang C. Potentiation of ganodermic acid S on prostaglandin E(1)-induced cyclic AMP elevation in human platelets. Thromb Res. 2000;99:135-145.

13. Kiss B, Karpati E. Mechanism of action of vinpocetine [in Hungarian; English abstract]. Acta Pharm Hung. 1996;66:213–214.

14. Hitzenberger G, Sommer W, Grandt R. Influence of vinpocetine on warfarin-induced inhibition of coagulation. Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther Toxicol. 1990;28:323–328.

15. Sovak M, Seligson AL, Konas M, et al. PC-SPES in prostate cancer: an herbal mixture currently containing warfarin and previously diethylstilbestrol and indomethacin. Presented at: 93rd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; April 6-10, 2002; San Francisco, CA.

16. AbdelFattah W, Hammad T. Chondroitin sulfate and glucosamine: A review of their safety profile. JANA. 2001;3:16-23.

Last reviewed December 2015 by EBSCO CAM Review Board