Table of contents:
- Drinking coffee after taking medication can trigger heart arrhythmias (abnormal beats)
- Caffeine can cancel the efficacy of drugs to cure disease
For most people, drinking coffee is a daily obligation that cannot be contested even when sick. However, don't drink coffee immediately after taking the medicine. This can be a weapon for your health master.
Drinking coffee after taking medication can trigger heart arrhythmias (abnormal beats)
The literacy effect you feel after drinking coffee comes from the content of caffeine which works by stimulating the work of the brain and heart. However, the caffeine in coffee can interact with several types of drugs. For example ephedrine and phenylpropanolamine, two drugs that work to treat cold symptoms and nasal congestion.
When you drink coffee after taking this medicine, your heart rate will increase dramatically. This is clearly very bad for the heart. The same thing will happen as with asthma drugs, theophylline or similar to caffeine, antidepressants and antipsychotic drugs, quinolone antibiotic groups, and birth control pills.
Another danger of drinking coffee after taking medicine is that it can trigger poisoning because caffeine can last longer in the body.
That is why caffeine cannot be consumed after you take the drug. Drink medicine preferably with water. It is not recommended to take medication with coffee, tea, juice, milk, soft soft drinks, let alone liquor. Give a gap of 2-3 hours after taking the medicine, then drink coffee.
Caffeine can cancel the efficacy of drugs to cure disease
In addition, the medicinal properties will appear longer (even less effective) if you drink coffee after taking medicine because caffeine interferes with the absorption of the drug in the stomach and small intestine. This effect occurs in several types of drugs, especially the class of antidepressants, estrogen, and drugs for thyroid disorders and osteoporosis.
A 2008 study showed that the absorption of levothyroxine, which is a medication for thyroid disorders, was reduced by 55 percent when taken with coffee. Likewise with alendronate, a type of osteoporosis drug whose absorption also decreased by 60 percent.
In women, coffee also affects hormonal balance. In some studies, levels of estrogen and other hormones in women have decreased shortly after drinking coffee, so that the absorption of some types of drugs can be impaired.
Side effects of coffee when taken with medication are often overlooked because people are more concerned with the side effects of coffee itself, such as heart palpitations and insomnia. Even though drinking coffee after taking medicine can trigger more various side effects.
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