Polyethylene glycol 3350 and Scopolamine Injection
Determining the interaction of Polyethylene glycol 3350 and Scopolamine Injection and the possibility of their joint administration.
No interaction was detected between the selected drugs or effects of joint drug administration are currently understudied, and it takes time and accumulated statistics to determine their interaction. A doctor should be consulted to address the issue of joint drug administration.
Generic Name: polyethylene glycol 3350
Brand name: ClearLax, GaviLAX, Gialax, GlycoLax, MiraLAX, PEG3350, SunMark ClearLax, HealthyLax, GaviLAX, MiraLAX
Synonyms: Polyethylene Glycol 3350
Generic Name: scopolamine
Brand name: Transderm-Scop
Synonyms: Scopolamine transdermal, Scopolamine (Systemic)
In the course of checking the drug compatibility and interactions, data from the following reference sources was used: Drugs.com, Rxlist.com, Webmd.com, Medscape.com.
- Polyethylene glycol 3350-Scopolamine Patch
- Polyethylene glycol 3350-Scopolamine transdermal
- Polyethylene glycol 3350-Scopolamine Transdermal Patch
- Polyethylene glycol 3350-Scot-Tussin Allergy Relief Formula
- Polyethylene glycol 3350-Scot-Tussin Diabetic
- Polyethylene glycol 3350-Scot-Tussin DM
- Scopolamine Injection-Polyethylene glycol 3350 and electrolytes
- Scopolamine Injection-Polyethylene glycol 3350, electrolytes, and ascorbic acid
- Scopolamine Injection-Polyethylene glycol 3350, sodium and potassium salts
- Scopolamine Injection-Polyethylene glycol 3350, sodium ascorbate, sodium sulfate, ascorbic acid, sodium chloride, and potassium chloride
- Scopolamine Injection-Polyethylene glycol electrolyte solution
- Scopolamine Injection-Polyethylene Glycol-Electrolyte Solution (MoviPrep, Plenvu)