[The following is merely my opinion and is in no way a medical advice]
Yes, but carefully. Exedrin is acetaminophen (Tylenol)+aspirin+caffeine. None of these, strictly speaking, interacts with naltrexone. The only advice/warning given is in regard to hepatotoxicity. Nal, acetaminophen and alcohol are all known to be toxic to liver (the degree depends on doses and individual genetics). So taking them together always has a potential to damage liver (and the same effect pertains to every other drug, basically). If you never had any issues with them separately and if you don't take them together in large doses and/or regularly then you are very unlikely to any serious problems. (Consider, for example, how many people drink and take Tylenol or Ibuprophen even though the combination is known to be quite toxic to liver). In any case, having an annual liver enzymes blood test is always a very good idea! Caveat: if you ever had any issues with liver, then none of the above reasonably applies and you absolutely need doctor supervision to make sure that whatever you take is not literally killing your liver.
There is another potential issue of whether caffeine in Exedrin would interfere with Nal's effectiveness in TSM. Here the answer is definitive: no one has any clue. If Nal works for you while drinking three cups of strong coffee daily then you should have no problem with Exedrin. But the same would not necessarily apply to others.
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