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GRAPEFRUIT OPENS THE DOOR TO EXCESS MEDICATION
DOSAGE
If
Lipitor, Viagra or Pletal claims a spot in your Medicine
Cabinet, chances are you’ve been warned not to drink Grapefruit
juice.
Doctors, Pharmacists and Drug Labels deliver that message with
more than 20 common medications, and most hospitals have removed
the juice from their menus.
So how did the otherwise super-fruit, touted for it’s ability to
fight Cancer and Heart Disease, become known for causing
toxicity, irregular heartbeats, low blood pressure and possibly
even death?
It’s all about Chemistry, not all of the medicine you swallow
gets into your bloodstream to take action. A portion gets broken
down along the way and goes to waste. Drug makers consider that
when calculating Drug Dosages.
Grapefruit reacts with drugs that are largely broken down in
small intestine before they have a chance to get to the
bloodstream. Many of these drugs bind to a type of Enzyme,
referred to as CYP3A4, and get metabolized.
Imagine, the Enzyme is a vault guard. Chemicals from the
grapefruit juice act as a diversion that draws the guard away
from the vault – the bloodstream, while the guard is occupied, A
thief – the drug is able to sneak through the door.
The end result: - People who take these drugs with grapefruit
juice get a higher dosage than their doctor prescribed.
This interaction was discovered in 1989 by the
University of Western Ontario Researchers who used grapefruit
juice to cover the taste of Alcohol in a study of Felodipine, a
blood pressure medication. They found the dosage was multiplied
as much as three times because of the grapefruit juice effect.
Since then, numerous studies have been done to determine which
drugs are affected, by what mechanism and to what extent.
Scientists used to think a think a chemical called ‘Naringin’,
the same one makes that grapefruits so bitter, was responsible
for the grapefruit juice effect, but Researchers did not observe
the heightened dosage when they tested ‘Naringin’ alone. Said
Dean Elbe a Clinical Pharmacist at the Richmond Hospital
Pharmacy department in
Vancouver, British Columbia and an expert in the area of
grapefruit juice / drug interactions.
They narrowed the effect down to a chemical in a family called
furanocoumarins, which also have been linked with toxicity
problems in celery plants.
Even a single, 8-ounce glass of either white, pink or red
grapefruit juice has been shown to be enough to cause a
significant effect, and the body won’t return to normal for up
to 72 hours after drinking the juice.
Researchers also have determined that grapefruit themselves can
cause the effect. “Those who are avoiding Grapefruit juice
should avoid Grapefruit as well.”
Seville oranges also can cause the grapefruit juice effect. The
bitter oranges are sometimes found in marmalade but not in
American orange juice. But the amount in Marmalade is not
significant enough to cause the effect.
Given the high cost of prescriptions and the possibility for
Grapefruit-induced higher dosages, it might seem like a great
idea to take to take these drugs with grapefruit juice.
But the level of the drug metabolizing enzyme can differ greatly
from person to person, so we cannot predict how much of the drug
will reach the blood stream.
If you are eating grapefruit while taking one of the effected
medications, don’t panic. We want to have a sudden change in
habits. If people are taking medications while regularly eating
grapefruit or drinking grapefruit juice, they should continue
their regimen.
But for the patients getting these medications for the first
time “Then it’s probably best to have them avoid grapefruit
altogether.”
- Vijay
Suvarna,
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