Potassium and Adempas drug interactions - a phase IV clinical study of FDA data
Summary:
Drug interactions are reported among people who take Potassium (potassium) and Adempas (riociguat). Common drug interactions include cough among females and hypotension among males.
The phase IV clinical study analyzes what interactions people have when they take Potassium and Adempas. It is created by eHealthMe based on reports of 386 people who take the same drugs from the FDA, and is updated regularly.
What is Potassium?
Potassium has active ingredients of potassium. It is often used in hypokalemia. eHealthMe is studying from 59,145 Potassium users. Check the latest studies of Potassium.
What is Adempas?
Adempas has active ingredients of riociguat. eHealthMe is studying from 29,740 Adempas users. Check the latest studies of Adempas.
386 people who take Potassium and Adempas together, and have interactions are studied.

What are the common drug interactions of Potassium and Adempas, by gender? *
What are the common drug interactions of Potassium and Adempas, by age (0-1 to 60+)? *
What are the existing conditions these people have? *
* Approximation only. Some reports may have incomplete information.
Do you take Potassium and Adempas?
- Personalize this study to your gender, age, symptoms and drugs
- Predict drug outcomes for up to one year with AI
- Get an AI agent to monitor your drugs continuously
Related studies:
Effectiveness of, side effects of, and alternative drugs to the 2 drugs:
Browse all drug interactions of Potassium and Adempas:
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y zSub-studies by gender and age:
Female: 0-1 2-9 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+
Male: 0-1 2-9 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+
Browse all side effects of Potassium:
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y zBrowse all side effects of Adempas:
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y zBrowse all interactions between Potassium and drugs from A to Z:
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y zBrowse all interactions between Adempas and drugs from A to Z:
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y zHow the study uses the data?
The study uses data from the FDA. It is based on potassium and riociguat (the active ingredients of Potassium and Adempas, respectively), and Potassium and Adempas (the brand names). Other drugs that have the same active ingredients (e.g. generic drugs) are not considered. Dosage of drugs is not considered in the study.
How to use the study?
DO NOT STOP MEDICATIONS without first consulting your doctor. If there are any serious or long term adverse effects discovered in the study, discuss the study with your doctor to ensure that proper medication management will be in place if applicable.
Who is eHealthMe?
With medical big data and proven AI/ML algorithms, eHealthMe provides a platform for everyone to run phase IV clinical trials. We study millions of patients and 5,000 more each day. Results of our real-world drug study have been referenced on 800+ peer-reviewed medical publications, including The Lancet, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, and Nature. Our analysis results are available to researchers, health care professionals, patients (testimonials), and software developers (open API).
WARNING, DISCLAIMER, USE FOR PUBLICATION
WARNING: Please DO NOT STOP MEDICATIONS without first consulting a physician since doing so could be hazardous to your health.
DISCLAIMER: All material available on eHealthMe.com is for informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment provided by a qualified healthcare provider. All information is observation-only. Our phase IV clinical studies alone cannot establish cause-effect relationship. Different individuals may respond to medication in different ways. Every effort has been made to ensure that all information is accurate, up-to-date, and complete, but no guarantee is made to that effect. The use of the eHealthMe site and its content is at your own risk.
If you use this eHealthMe study on publication, please acknowledge it with a citation: study title, URL, accessed date.
Recent studies on eHealthMe:
- Could Thalomid cause Seasonal Allergy? - 2 seconds ago
- Could Cardene cause Hypertension Aggravated? - 5 seconds ago
- Could Tramadol cause Impulse-Control Disorder? - 6 seconds ago
- Could Cimzia cause Costochondritis? - 7 seconds ago
- Could Lasix cause Aortic Rupture? - 9 seconds ago
- Could Subutex cause Muscle Weakness Aggravated? - 10 seconds ago
- Could Medroxyprogesterone Acetate cause Insomnia Exacerbated? - 28 seconds ago
- Could Singulair cause Urinary Incontinence Aggravated? - 28 seconds ago
- Could Atrovent cause High Blood Cholesterol? - 32 seconds ago
- Could Prednisolone cause Rash Pruritic? - 34 seconds ago