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​5 common foods that can mess with medicines​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 30, 2025, 11:00 IST
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5 common foods that can mess with medicines

Medicines are made to work in highly precise ways. They get absorbed in one place, broken down in another, and start working exactly when they’re meant to. Food, on the other hand, has its own agenda. Most of the time, the two get along. But sometimes, food can get in the way of your medicine. The result might be a drug that hits harder than intended, one that fizzles out too soon, or simply doesn’t work the way it should. These aren’t rare, obscure interactions buried in medical journals. They involve everyday items in most kitchens. Here are five to watch out for.

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Grapefruit: the unsuspecting heavyweight

It looks harmless, even virtuous – that pink, tangy wedge at breakfast. But grapefruit contains compounds that interfere with enzymes in the gut and liver, the very enzymes that normally break down medicines. Block those, and suddenly the drug lingers longer in the bloodstream, building up to levels higher than the doctor prescribed. Cholesterol-lowering statins, blood pressure tablets, even certain anti-allergy pills are on that list. The solution is simple: try oranges, lemons, or sweet lime instead – all the citrus taste, without the trouble.

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Leafy greens: when “healthy” complicates things

Spinach, kale, mustard greens, methi – the food our elders keep telling us to eat more of. But for people on blood thinners like warfarin, those greens can complicate matters. They’re packed with vitamin K, a nutrient that helps blood clot. Too much, and the drug’s thinning effect weakens. Too little, and the balance tips the other way. Doctors don’t usually tell patients to stop eating greens altogether. What they ask for is consistency. If greens are part of your daily plate, keep it that way, so the dosage can be calibrated around it.

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Dairy: not always the best partner for antibiotics

A glass of milk or a bowl of yogurt usually counts as comfort. But pair it with certain antibiotics, especially tetracyclines or fluoroquinolones – and it can interfere with how well the medicine works. Calcium binds to the drug in the stomach, forming a compound the body can’t absorb. Meaning, the medicine passes right through without doing much work. The easy fix? Timing. Take the antibiotic with light foods, or leave a two-hour gap before or after dairy. You don’t have to abandon your chai or dahi, just don’t mix them with the pill.

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Caffeine: quiet mischief in the system

Coffee in the morning, tea in the afternoon, maybe a cola with dinner; caffeine slips into the day without much thought. But if you’re on bronchodilators for asthma, that extra kick can sometimes bring side effects like shaky hands, a racing heartbeat, or feeling more restless than usual. With some antidepressants and antibiotics, caffeine takes longer to clear out of the body, stretching out restlessness or insomnia into the night. It’s not about banning coffee. It’s about noticing if the cup that usually feels normal suddenly makes you jittery and knowing the medicine may be part of the reason.

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Alcohol: the familiar disruptor

Unlike grapefruit or greens, alcohol’s reputation is well earned. It interferes with more medicines than any other everyday drink. With paracetamol, it puts extra stress on the liver. With sedatives, it slows breathing to dangerous levels. With diabetes drugs, it can send blood sugar soaring or crashing. And with antidepressants, it often worsens mood instead of lifting it. The advice here isn’t appealing: drink alcohol in moderation, and avoid it around the time you take your medicine.

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Copyright © May 28, 2026, 12.14AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service