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A Fatty Meal Might Affect How You Absorb CBD
  • Robert Preidt
  • Posted August 16, 2019

A Fatty Meal Might Affect How You Absorb CBD

Having a cheeseburger with that CBD-infused product? A new study suggests that fatty foods might boost the body's absorption of cannabidiol (CBD).

In 2018, CBD capsules received U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for use in patients with seizures, but how food affects absorption of the drug has been unclear.

In this study, University of Minnesota researchers examined the effects of fatty foods and fasting on CBD absorption.

The investigators compared CBD concentrations in epilepsy patients who were taking 99% pure CBD capsules after they fasted and after they had a high-fat breakfast (such as a breakfast burrito).

Compared with fasting, the amount of CBD in the body was four times higher after the high-fat meal and the maximum amount in the blood was 14 times higher, the findings showed.

There were no differences in mental functioning when the patients took CBD after eating or fasting, according to the study in the August issue of the journal Epilepsia.

"The type of food can make a large difference in the amount of CBD that gets absorbed into the body. Although fatty foods can increase the absorption of CBD, it can also increase the variability, as not all meals contain the same amount of fat," study co-author Angela Birnbaum said in a university news release.

Study co-author Ilo Leppik said increased absorption of CBD can lead to lower medication costs.

Both Birnbaum and Leppik are professors in the department of experimental and clinical pharmacology.

"For epilepsy patients, a goal is to maintain consistent blood concentrations of drug," Birnbaum said. "This study shows that CBD concentrations could vary significantly if patients take it differently, sometimes with or without food. Variations in blood concentrations could leave a patient more susceptible to seizures."

More information

The U.S. National Institutes of Health has more on cannabidiol.

SOURCE: University of Minnesota, news release, Aug. 13, 2019
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