Make sure you buy yellow grapefruit juice and not the ruby red kind. Here are some research studies on it.
Grapefruit juice–drug interactions
David G. Bailey1, J. Malcolm1, O. Arnold1 & J. David Spence1
The novel finding that grapefruit juice can markedly augment oral drug bioavailability was based on an unexpected observation from an interaction study between the dihydropyridine calcium channel antagonist, felodipine, and ethanol in which grapefruit juice was used to mask the taste of the ethanol. Subsequent investigations showed that grapefruit juice acted by reducing presystemic felodipine metabolism through selective post-translational down regulation of cytochrome P450 3A4 (CYP3A4) expression in the intestinal wall. Since the duration of effect of grapefruit juice can last 24 h, repeated juice consumption can result in a cumulative increase in felodipine AUC and Cmax. The high variability of the magnitude of effect among individuals appeared dependent upon inherent differences in enteric CYP3A4 protein expression such that individuals with highest baseline CYP3A4 had the highest proportional increase. At least 20 other drugs have been assessed for an interaction with grapefruit juice. Medications with innately low oral bioavailability because of substantial presystemic metabolism mediated by CYP3A4 appear affected by grapefruit juice. Clinically relevant interactions seem likely for most dihydropyridines, terfenadine, saquinavir, cyclosporin, midazolam, triazolam and verapamil and may also occur with lovastatin, cisapride and astemizole. The importance of the interaction appears to be influenced by individual patient susceptibility, type and amount of grapefruit juice and administration-related factors. Although in vitro findings support the flavonoid, naringin, or the furanocoumarin, 6',7'-dihydroxybergamottin, as being active ingredients, a recent investigation indicated that neither of these substances made a major contribution to grapefruit juice-drug interactions in humans
caffeine levels and it effects may be extended by consuming grapefruit or grapefruit juice (1,5). There is a chemical in grapefruit called naringin that extends the half-life of caffeine. Naringin, which is the substance that gives grapefruit its unique bitter taste, slows the breakdown of caffeine into its metabolite, paraxanthine, in the liver. Consuming canned grapefruit juice is the best strategy because it has much higher concentrations of naringin. The maceration of fresh grapefruit releases the active ingredient which is otherwise locked in (18). This may allow athletes to consume smaller dosages of caffeine and still get the same results and extend the effects later in a long endurance event.