Cautions with other medicines
There are some medicines that may affect the way lisinopril works.
Tell your doctor if you're taking any of these medicines:
- anti-inflammatory medicines, such as ibuprofen, indomethacin or aspirin for pain relief (low-dose aspirin – 75mg a day, is safe to take with lisinopril)
- medicines to treat low blood pressure, heart failure, asthma or allergies, such as ephedrine, noradrenaline or adrenaline
- medicines to treat high blood pressure, such as aliskeren
- other medicines that can lower your blood pressure, such as some antidepressants, nitrates (for chest pain), baclofen (a muscle relaxant), anaesthetics, or medicines for an enlarged prostate gland
- medicines that calm down your immune system, such as ciclosporin or tacrolimus
- medicines that make you pee more (diuretics), such as furosemide
- medicines that can increase the amount of potassium in your blood, such as spironolactone, triamterene, amiloride, potassium supplements, trimethoprim (for infections) or heparin (for preventing blood clots)
- steroid medicines such as prednisolone
- allopurinol (for gout)
- procainamide (for heart rhythm problems)
- medicines for diabetes
- racecadotril (for diarrhoea)
- lithium (for mental health problems)
Mixing lisinopril with herbal remedies or supplements
There's very little information about taking herbal remedies and supplements with lisinopril. They're not tested in the same way as pharmacy and prescription medicines.
Important: Medicine safety
Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you're taking any other medicines, including herbal remedies, vitamins or supplements.