splenda
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2005
- Messages
- 651
Apparently Earl Grey tea has oil of bergamot in it. As we all know, this is the source of bergamottin, the apparent chemical that is involved with inhibiting cytochrome p450 enzymes and is the main constituent in grapefruit juice that gives GFJ its CYP450 inhibiting effects. Knowing this, will drinking earl grey tea inhibit the metabolism of drugs because of the oil of bergamot (just like GFJ)?
It would be interesting to get more of an effect out of my daily morning methadone dose (160mg) by drinking a cup of earl grey tea the night before/1-2 hours after dosing. Does anyone know about earl grey tea/oil of bergamot and their interactions with the CYP450 enzymatic family and how it interacts with drug metabolism?
Thanks! If mods find this more suitable for Advanced Drug Discussion, please move.
Oh, and on side note, since I was researching and purchased a bunch of teas/tisanes today... rooibos unfortunately induces CYP3A4 as seen in the following Japanese study... and I spent $7 on rooibos today and I can't return it because I already drank about half a cup of it (and threw the rest out as soon as I found this study; as I don't want it to induce the metabolism of my methadone since methadone is a substrate of CYP3A4.)
http://sciencelinks.jp/j-east/article/200707/000020070707A0177014.php
It would be interesting to get more of an effect out of my daily morning methadone dose (160mg) by drinking a cup of earl grey tea the night before/1-2 hours after dosing. Does anyone know about earl grey tea/oil of bergamot and their interactions with the CYP450 enzymatic family and how it interacts with drug metabolism?
Thanks! If mods find this more suitable for Advanced Drug Discussion, please move.
Oh, and on side note, since I was researching and purchased a bunch of teas/tisanes today... rooibos unfortunately induces CYP3A4 as seen in the following Japanese study... and I spent $7 on rooibos today and I can't return it because I already drank about half a cup of it (and threw the rest out as soon as I found this study; as I don't want it to induce the metabolism of my methadone since methadone is a substrate of CYP3A4.)
http://sciencelinks.jp/j-east/article/200707/000020070707A0177014.php