|

New York Times at http://www.nytimes.com/
August 5, 2008
Personal Health
Sorting Out Coffee’s Contradictions
By JANE E. BRODY
When Howard D. Schultz in 1985 founded the company that would become the
wildly successful Starbucks chain, no financial adviser had to tell him
that coffee was America’s leading beverage and caffeine its most widely
used drug. The millions of customers who flock to Starbucks to order a
double espresso, latte or coffee grande attest daily to his assessment
of American passions.
Although the company might have overestimated consumer willingness to
spend up to $4 for a cup of coffee — it recently announced that it would
close hundreds of underperforming stores — scores of imitators that now
sell coffee, tea and other products laced with caffeine reflect a
society determined to run hard on as little sleep as possible.
But as with any product used to excess, consumers often wonder about the
health consequences. And researchers readily oblige. Hardly a month goes
by without a report that hails coffee, tea or caffeine as healthful or
damns them as potential killers.
Can all these often contradictory reports be right? Yes. Coffee and tea,
after all, are complex mixtures of chemicals, several of which may
independently affect health.
Caffeine Myths
Through the years, the public has been buffeted by much misguided
information about caffeine and its most common source, coffee. In March
the Center for Science in the Public Interest published a comprehensive
appraisal of scientific reports in its Nutrition Action Healthletter.
Its findings and those of other research reports follow.
Hydration. It was long thought that caffeinated beverages were
diuretics, but studies reviewed last year found that people who consumed
drinks with up to 550 milligrams of caffeine produced no more urine than
when drinking fluids free of caffeine. Above 575 milligrams, the drug
was a diuretic.
So even a Starbucks grande, with 330 milligrams of caffeine, will not
send you to a bathroom any sooner than if you drank 16 ounces of pure
water. Drinks containing usual doses of caffeine are hydrating and, like
water, contribute to the body’s daily water needs.
Heart disease. Heart patients, especially those with high blood
pressure, are often told to avoid caffeine, a known stimulant. But an
analysis of 10 studies of more than 400,000 people found no increase in
heart disease among daily coffee drinkers, whether their coffee came
with caffeine or not.
“Contrary to common belief,” concluded cardiologists at the University
of California, San Francisco, there is “little evidence that coffee
and/or caffeine in typical dosages increases the risk” of heart attack,
sudden death or abnormal heart rhythms.
In fact, among 27,000 women followed for 15 years in the Iowa Women’s
Health Study, those who drank one to three cups a day reduced their risk
of cardiovascular disease by 24 percent, although this benefit
diminished as the quantity of coffee rose.
Hypertension. Caffeine induces a small, temporary rise in blood
pressure. But in a study of 155,000 nurses, women who drank coffee with
or without caffeine for a decade were no more likely to develop
hypertension than noncoffee drinkers. However, a higher risk of
hypertension was found from drinking colas. A Johns Hopkins study that
followed more than 1,000 men for 33 years found that coffee drinking
played little overall role in the development of hypertension.
Cancer. Panic swept this coffee-dependent nation in 1981 when a Harvard
study tied the drink to a higher risk of pancreatic cancer. Coffee
consumption temporarily plummeted, and the researchers later concluded
that perhaps smoking, not coffee, was the culprit.
In an international review of 66 studies last year, scientists found
coffee drinking had little if any effect on the risk of developing
pancreatic or kidney cancer. In fact, another review suggested that
compared with people who do not drink coffee, those who do have half the
risk of developing liver cancer.
And a study of 59,000 women in Sweden found no connection between
coffee, tea or caffeine consumption and breast cancer.
Bone loss. Though some observational studies have linked caffeinated
beverages to bone loss and fractures, human physiological studies have
found only a slight reduction in calcium absorption and no effect on
calcium excretion, suggesting the observations may reflect a diminished
intake of milk-based beverages among coffee and tea drinkers.
Dr. Robert Heaney of Creighton University says that caffeine’s negative
effect on calcium can be offset by as little as one or two tablespoons
of milk. He advised that coffee and tea drinkers who consume the
currently recommended amount of calcium need not worry about caffeine’s
effect on their bones.
Weight loss. Here’s a bummer. Although caffeine speeds up metabolism,
with 100 milligrams burning an extra 75 to 100 calories a day, no
long-term benefit to weight control has been demonstrated. In fact, in a
study of more than 58,000 health professionals followed for 12 years,
both men and women who increased their caffeine consumption gained more
weight than those who didn’t.
Health Benefits
Probably the most important effects of caffeine are its ability to
enhance mood and mental and physical performance. At consumption levels
up to 200 milligrams (the amount in about 16 ounces of ordinary brewed
coffee), consumers report an improved sense of well-being, happiness,
energy, alertness and sociability, Roland Griffiths of the Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine reported, although higher amounts sometimes cause
anxiety and stomach upset.
Millions of sleep-deprived Americans depend on caffeine to help them
make it through their day and drive safely. The drug improves alertness
and reaction time. In the sleep-deprived, it improves memory and the
ability to perform complex tasks.
For the active, caffeine enhances endurance in aerobic activities and
performance in anaerobic ones, perhaps because it blunts the perception
of pain and aids the ability to burn fat for fuel instead of its
carbohydrates.
Recent disease-related findings can only add to coffee’s popularity. A
review of 13 studies found that people who drank caffeinated coffee, but
not decaf, had a 30 percent lower risk of Parkinson’s disease.
Another review found that compared with noncoffee drinkers, people who
drank four to six cups of coffee a day, with or without caffeine, had a
28 percent lower risk of Type 2 diabetes. This benefit probably comes
from coffee’s antioxidants and chlorogenic acid.
~ My Favorite Coffee Shop ~
 
Niki Gillota, owner/proprietor
Gypsy Beans & Baking Co. is located on the
Southeast corner of West 65th and Detroit Avenue and is open:
Sunday - Thursday: 7:00am - 9:00pm
Friday & Saturday: 7:00am - 11:00pm
My Favorite Way To Buy Coffee... FAIR
TRADE!

 |
|