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New Buzz On Coffee: It's Not The Caffeine That Raises Blood PressureNovember 19, 2002 DALLAS
(American Heart Association) -- People who enjoy the occasional decaf latte may be getting
more of a lift than they know, scientists report in the rapid access issue of Circulation:
Journal of the American Heart Association. Swiss
scientists studying caffeine's effects in a small group of people report markedly
elevated blood pressure and increased nervous system activity when occasional coffee
drinkers drank a triple espresso, regardless of whether or not it contained caffeine. Surprisingly,
people who drank coffee on a regular basis showed increased stimulation of sympathetic
nerve pathways - but no increase in blood pressure. This is
the first time such disparities in reactions to coffee have been reported, says lead
researcher Roberto Corti, M.D., a cardiologist at University Hospital in Zurich. The
results suggest that some unknown ingredient or ingredients in coffee - not caffeine - is
responsible for cardiovascular activation, he explains. Coffee contains several hundred
different substances. "Until
now we have attributed the cardiovascular effects of coffee to caffeine, but we found
non-coffee drinkers given decaffeinated coffee also display these effects," Corti
says. "This demonstrates how little we know about the effects of one of our most
popular beverages and the most abundantly consumed stimulant worldwide. "Coffee's
cardiovascular safety remains controversial," he says. "The possible health
hazards have been related to its main ingredient - caffeine." The
researchers measured blood pressure, heart rate and muscle sympathetic nervous system
activity (MSA) in 15 healthy volunteers (ages 27 to 38) - six habitual coffee drinkers and
nine who either abstained or drank coffee only occasionally. Measurements were recorded
before, during and after participants consumed a triple espresso, a decaf triple espresso
or intravenous administration of the equivalent amount of caffeine, or a placebo. None of
the subjects knew whether they were receiving caffeine. Sympathetic
nervous system activity plays an important role in the regulation of blood pressure and
over-activation has been linked with high blood pressure. The
non-habitual or occasional coffee drinkers had systolic blood pressure (the top number in
a blood pressure reading) increases of 12 millimeters of mercury (mm Hg) after 60 minutes.
No significant change was observed in habitual drinkers' blood pressure. MSA increased in
both caffeine and decaffeinated coffee groups by 29 percent after 30 minutes and 53
percent after 60 minutes, with almost identical activation times. In
non-habitual coffee drinkers given decaffeinated espresso, systolic blood pressure
increased despite no increase in blood concentrations of caffeine. MSA activity was
only marginally increased, and heart rate and diastolic blood pressure remained unchanged.
"Recent
epidemiological studies have revealed a possible beneficial effect on cardiovascular
disease and deaths in habitual coffee drinkers," he says. "But our study
strongly supports the hypothesis that ingredients other than caffeine are responsible for
the stimulating effects of coffee on the cardiovascular system." The lack
of blood pressure elevation in coffee drinkers suggests the effects may be mediated
through increased tolerance, the researcher notes. However, sympathetic nerve activation
occurred in both groups when caffeine was administered intravenously, and habitual
drinkers' MSA increased after drinking caffeinated espresso, both of which suggest
tolerance to coffee does not appear to be related to caffeine. He
concludes that the potential adverse effects attributed to coffee could be less
hazardous in regular consumers with normal blood pressure. In such people, especially
those without a hereditary predisposition to hypertension, coffee drinking can't be
considered a risk factor for hypertension. What
remains to be seen is whether people with hypertension should be advised to avoid
decaffeinated coffee as well, Corti says. Source: www.intellihealth.com
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