Grapefruit Juice To Increase Effectiveness Of Orals

Pharm_Fed

MuscleChemistry Registered Member
James Maskalyk
Editorial Fellow, CMAJ

Reason for posting: Grapefruit juice interacts with a number of medications. This unusual discovery was made serendipitously in 1989 during an experiment designed to test the effect of ethanol on a calcium-channel blocker.1 The observed response was later determined to be due to the grapefruit juice delivery vehicle rather than the alcohol. In the past decade, the list of drug interactions with grapefruit juice has expanded to include several classes of medication, precipitating a recent advisory from Health Canada.2

The interaction: As little as 250 mL of grapefruit juice can change the metabolism of some drugs.3 This drug–food interaction occurs because of a common pathway involving a specific isoform of cytochrome P450 — CYP3A4 — present in both the liver and the intestinal wall. Studies suggest that grapefruit juice exerts its effect primarily at the level of the intestine.4

After ingestion, a substrate contained in the grapefruit binds to the intestinal isoenzyme, impairing first-pass metabolism directly and causing a sustained decrease in CYP3A4 protein expression.5 Within 4 hours of ingestion, a reduction in the effective CYP3A4 concentration occurs, with effects lasting up to 24 hours.6 The net result is inhibition of drug metabolism in the intestine and increased oral bioavailability. Because of the prolonged response, separating the intake of the drug and the juice does not prevent interference.

Individuals express CYP3A4 in different proportions, those with the highest intestinal concentration being most susceptible to grapefruit juice–drug interactions.5 An effect is seen with the whole fruit as well as its juice, so caution should be exercised with both.7 The precise chemical compound in grapefruit that causes the interaction has not been identified. There is no similar reaction with orange juice, although there is some suspicion that "sour oranges" such as the Seville variety, may have some effect.8 A recent study, however, that tested the known interference of grapefruit juice with cyclosporine showed no similar effect with Seville oranges.9

There is some interest in the potential therapeutic benefit of adding grapefruit juice to a drug regimen to increase oral bioavailability.3 The limitation is the individual variation in patient response. However, if the chemical that causes grapefruit's CYP3A4 inhibition is elucidated, there may be an opportunity to modulate that pathway in a controlled fashion.

What to do: Much of the data obtained on grapefruit juice–drug interactions involved measuring serum drug concentrations in small numbers of healthy volunteers. Because of the limited data and only occasional case reports,10 it is difficult to quantify the clinical significance for individual patients. One may assume that the interaction occurs primarily with oral medicines, and only with those that share the CYP3A4 metabolism pathway, with the consequence being increased oral bioavailability, higher serum drug concentrations and associated adverse effects.

Physicians should review medication lists often, with the goal of warning patients about adverse interactions. A list of medicines with which patients should not consume grapefruit is provided in Table 1.3,11,12 In the case of several medications that share the CYP3A4 metabolism pathway, but for which a clinical effect has not been elucidated or is theoretical, patients should be advised to consume grapefruit cautiously and be monitored for toxicity.

http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/167/3/279
 
Has anyone tried this with any success? I'm about to start a four week cycle of M-Drol (Superdrol clone) and would like as much out of it as possible.
 
ok im kind of lost, so when u drink grapefruit juice, it increases some orals bioavailibility, meaning you get more out of your orals, or some orals?
 
Yeah, if the oral medicine is metabolized with the CYP3A4 protein in the intestines, then drinking grapefruit juice should increase the bioavailability of that medicine. I'm wondering if anyone has tried this with good results for any performance enhancing orals.

I've heard of prescription medications having warning not to drink grapefruit juice while taking them. I figure this is why and wondered if it worked on medications that would more of interest from a bodybuilding perspective.
 
grapefruit juice–drug interactions involved measuring serum drug concentrations in small numbers - does that mean the medicines were taken in serum form to mix w/ the grapefruit juice? if that was the case would binders and other non-active ingredients in some orals cause contradictions? ... b/c some caps are loaded w/ some filler, and of course tabs have binders in them usually (or at least I would think) ... does a serum form of the drug cause quicker interaction and bind easier to the receptors to prevent serums from absorbing or does that mean ANY active ingredient altogether? ... just thoughts...

so from a bb'ing standpoint.. hypothetically... winstrol suspension and winny tabs are supposed to have the same bioavailability as each other and the same chemical makeup, oral OR inject... which is the reason that some say you can drink the suspension instead of inject... in my question example... could you have better bioavailability on 50mg/winstrol per dose as a serum(water based suspension), or as a cap/tab (with fillers and binders?), b/c the grapefruit... hypothetically could bind to whatever enzymes to prevent motabilism in the small intestion? ...
 
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I've actually tried this before with anadrol on one occasion and dbol on another, hate to be the bearer bad news but I didn't notice any diff.
 
Ive heard this for years but never tested it out. Im not a huge fan of orals but i could see why it might work. Its not gonna make a huge difference i wouldnt think but when your striving to get every last bit out of your cycle its definitely worth a shot.
 
It works more with prescription meds, and you have to be careful taking this with something like xanax, vicotin, or sleeping pills...

It works 100% with those types of meds, I never have seen legitimate research showing gear being effective...

Why not run a research test on yourself....Get some bloodwork done an hour after, then two hours after, then three hours after and compare it to normal blood levels...

I would love to do that bro, I just don't have the money right now to pay for all the bloodwork.
 
yea it does work with xanax i know and it says on the script bottle to not take it with it. i also read before of people taking the extract narginine (spelling) i beleive is the substance in grapefruit that does this with there caffeine ephedrine aspirin stack to increase the effectiveness. and if i remeber correctly its either canned or bottled one of them has a higher concentration of it.
 
Yep, grapefruit juice has been known to cause a greater effect from many prescription drugs. I have no idea if it works with oral steroids, but it could happen.
 
I'll let y'all know

I have a few more H-Drol runs in my future. I will wash 'em down w/ grapefruit and see how that goes.

Man.....these cycles just get more n more spensive every day!
 
when you run any type of creatine product they always say take it with some grape juice or a juice with no acid in it....
 
when you run any type of creatine product they always say take it with some grape juice or a juice with no acid in it....

That is true because the acid converts the creatine into creatinine, an unusable form of the compound.
 
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