Comment on Do your mouth tissues absorb more caffeine after a tonsillectomy/other surgery?

southsamurai@sh.itjust.works ⁨1⁩ ⁨month⁩ ago

Ahhh, it shouldn’t change absorption. I can’t be certain, but there’s no reason that it should purely because of a tonsillectomy.

I would suspect some kind of medication interaction before any changes to absorption.

If anything, the inflammation would be more likely to decrease the amounts absorbed orally.

That would go for any surgery I can think of.

The caveat being that I’m not a doctor, much less an oral surgeon.

But I’m sitting here running through things in my head that might cause a change in perceived caffeine affect. I still think the most likely cause would be changes brought on by whatever anaesthetic was used, or post surgical medications.

Could be the empty stomach and/or having previous caffeine out of your system entirely, but that would only be the case if you’re a fairly steady coffee drinker, but not a heavy one. Someone that’s mainlining lifer’s juice would have such high tolerance it wouldn’t change at all. A light drinker, say a small cup with breakfast might notice a change post surgery, but it’s a pretty dubious might.

I dunno, that’s all I got.

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