Grapefruit is good for you!
It’s a vitamin C-rich citrus fruit that’s low in sugar and contains vitamin A, potassium, and fibre. It has a low glycemic index and does not spike your blood sugar when you eat it. The pink and red varieties also contain lycopene.
It’s definitely a nutritious health-promoting food.
It even had a whole weight-loss diet created around it – the “grapefruit diet!” Research has proven that grapefruit doesn’t have any magical weight loss properties, so don’t eat it just to lose weight.
But…
There is something you need to know about grapefruit if you take medications.
Grapefruit-Medication Interaction
Grapefruit enhances the effects of many medications – over 85 at last count; this is sometimes called the “grapefruit effect.” Taking grapefruit (or its juice) along with certain medications – even a day apart – can increase the risk of side effects.
For example, when taken with certain blood pressure lowering medications it lowers blood pressure too much. This causes lightheadedness and other symptoms.
Another example is when taken with certain birth control pills, women have a higher risk of blood clots.
Grapefruit affects the metabolism of some of the following categories of medications:
- Blood pressure
- Birth control
- Chemotherapy
- Anti-infection
- Cholesterol-lowering
- Immunosuppressive and anti-rejection
- Urinary tract agents
- Some
- over-the-counter cough medication
- 2 cups pineapple, peeled & chopped
- 1 cup cucumber, washed & chopped
- 1 lemon, peeled

Registered Holistic Nutritionist and Endometriosis Expert. Former engineer who reversed her own stage 4 endometriosis naturally. Founder of the Anti-Endo Lifestyle program at khushsra.com.