Kiseki wrote:
Does anyone else have this issue? My body seems to be incredibly sensitive to caffeine as well as other drugs which normal people seem to be able to take just fine. The other day I took some medication with the equivalent caffeine of 1 cup of coffee. It made me shake, sweat, the inside of my chest felt hollow tight and burned up. I started talking manically and couldn't stop peeing or pooping. This lasted a good 8 hours.
I've had this happen before and people never believe me when I tell them.
I feel that I am sensitive to life overall, but was wondering if anyone else here has sensitivity to any foods or drugs.
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There is a How To (understand) Hyperactivity book (1981) about ADHD Inattentive by C. Thomas Wild which goes into great detail about how only 100 mg of caffeine can impact paying attention, concentration, focus, and memory. Wild also talks about an extreme chemical sensitivity to a few food additives (not all food additives) such as FD&C Yellow Food Color No. 5 (tartrazine) and the artificial sweetener, sodium saccharin. Wild mentions the large difference which a few persons can tell between two name brand medicines (such as Tirend - 100 mg caffeine vs NoDoz - 100 mg) or a name brand medicine (such as NoDoz) and a generic brand name (such as Stay Awake - Awake). Wild reports that caffeine can work for a few of those (not all of those) with ADHD better (not a cure) than Ritalin/other stronger drugs (not cures either). He also calls for full disclosure ingredient labeling for food additives/hidden ingredients contained in drugs and foods. Food additives do not cause hyperactivity - ADHD - ADD but, for a handful of persons including a few adults, they can work as powerful, undisclosed drugs which can affect such things as interfering with normal sleep as well as normal healing of scrapes and cuts/wounds. Caffeine is one of those drugs which some people find beneficial, others drink coffee just for the taste, and still others find it unwanted and choose to avoid it. The same holds true for a number of medicines used to treat epilepsy. Some persons swear a certain medicine for epilepsy such as Dilantin really works well (Jack Dreyfus) vs others who say Dilantin was the worst drug they tried and they switched to another epilepsy drug which for them works better.
http://www.rsna.org/rsna/media/pr2005/Coffee.cfm (Short-term memory)
http://www.coffeescience.org/alert (Mental alertness)
http://www.nutrition.gov/