Wednesday, 29 July 2015

Did You Know?


Drinking grapefruit while taking medication can cause instant overdose and death.

It has been confirmed for decades that the citrus fruit can interact in harmful ways with medications, but a recent study observes a steady increase to the lengthy list of drugs that can have deadly consequences when taken with grapefruit.
According to research conducted by those at the Lawson Health Institute Research Center in London, Ontario, although the number of prescription drugs with serious side-effects seen after grapefruit consumption have gone up, many physicians writing the prescriptions seem to be unaware.
Between 2008 and 2012, the number of medications with the potential to interact with grapefruit and cause serious adverse effects has increased from 17 to 43, representing an average rate of increase exceeding 6 drugs per year. This increase is a result of the introduction of new chemical entities and formulations.”

The study published by the Canadian Medical Association Journal stated that more than 85 drugs are known to interact with grapefruit adversely, as well as some other citrus fruits like Seville oranges, limes and pomelos. Bailey told NBC News that 13 of these drugs might cause “sudden death.”

Other adverse effects include acute kidney failure, respiratory failure, gastrointestinal bleeding, bone marrow suppression in immunocompromised people and renal toxicity.

Potentially harmful reactions occur when the furanocoumarins in the fruits interact with CYP3A4 enzyme, which helps metabolize drugs in the body. The enzyme is known to inactivate the effects of 50 percent of all medication. NBC reported that because of this doctors prescribe dosages accordingly. The furanocoumarins though will inhibit this enzyme, which can allow the drug to build up in the patient’s body.

Even a small amount of grapefruit consumption is effective at inhibiting this enzyme, which could then lead to dangerous medication concentrations in the body.
Source: The Blaze



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