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Regular coffee habit may fight heart disease :phew:
Regular coffee habit may fight heart disease
Study finds no link between drinking up to 6 cups a day and early death risk WASHINGTON - Long-term coffee drinking does not appear to increase a person's risk of early death and may cut a person's chances of dying from heart disease, according to a study published on Monday. Previous studies have given a mixed picture of health effects from coffee, finding a variety of benefits and some drawbacks from the popular drink. The new study looked at people who drank caffeinated or decaffeinated coffee. Researchers led by Esther Lopez-Garcia of Universidad Autonoma de Madrid in Spain followed 84,214 U.S. women from 1980 to 2004 and 41,736 U.S. men from 1986 to 2004. They found that regular coffee drinking — up to six cups a day — was not associated with increased deaths among the study's middle-aged participants. In fact, the coffee drinkers, particularly the women, experienced a small decline in death rates from heart disease. The study found no association between coffee consumption and cancer deaths. "Our study indicates that coffee consumption does not have a detrimental effect," Lopez-Garcia, whose research appears in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine, said in a telephone interview. "It seems like long-term coffee consumption may have some beneficial effects." There has been a debate among scientists about the health effects of drinking coffee, which typically contains the stimulant caffeine and a number of other important compounds. The people who took part in the research completed questionnaires on how frequently they drank coffee, other diet habits, smoking and medical conditions. The researchers then studied the mortality risk over the period of the study among people with different coffee-drinking habits. Mixed picture The study found that women who reported drinking two to three cups of caffeinated coffee per day had a 25 percent lower risk of death from heart disease than women who did not drink coffee. The researchers saw a smaller decreased risk for men but it was not statistically significant. Drinking decaffeinated coffee was associated with a small reduction in overall mortality risk, the researchers said. The people in the study had no history of cardiovascular disease or cancer when they entered it. The women were nurses and the men doctors, dentists and other health professionals. Some studies have indicated coffee is a great source of antioxidants, substances that may protect against the effects of molecules called free radicals that can damage cells and may play a role in heart disease, cancer and other ailments. Recent studies have offered a mixed picture on the health effects of coffee. A study that came out in January found that pregnant women who drink two or more cups of coffee a day had twice the risk of miscarriage as those who avoid caffeine. Another study appearing in January found that drinking caffeinated coffee lowered a woman's risk of ovarian cancer. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25208589/ | |
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I saw this story o the news, and thought to myself, that's right. I have been drinking coffee to curb asthma attacks since I was a kid, and when my son gets an attack I fix him a nice hot cup of joe, it always does the trick. Coffee always did good for us, I'll take another cup thank you. | |
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It will probably give you something else, but they never disclose that, now do they>? | |
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well, i thought it was interesting because Llee did that thread last week about how bad coffee is for us....
i betcha the methodology of the study about coffee has a lot to do with the outcome of the study | |
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I drink one large cup a day. Usually no more or less
I have zero concern about the effects because I love my cup of coffee and I am not willing to give it up | |
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I don't like coffee. | |
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Well Ren is set for life then!
I'm firmly planted in denial | |
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Don't get too excited. It's a study made in a Spanish University
Bet they were sponsored by a coffee brand | |
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I live on iced-coffee! | |
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probably because coffee washes a lot of calcium out of your system
thus there's less calcium left to clog up your arteries. although a decline in calcium levels brings with it a whole host of other problems, especially for women (who seem to benefit from less heart disease according to this study) because the loss of calcium can lead to less bone density and osteoperosis etc etc. .. [Edited 6/18/08 7:34am] and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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IstenSzek said: probably because coffee washes a lot of calcium out of your system
thus there's less calcium left to clog up your arteries. although a decline in calcium levels brings with it a whole host of other problems, especially for women (who seem to benefit from less heart disease according to this study) because the loss of calcium can lead to less bone density and osteoperosis etc etc. .. [Edited 6/18/08 7:34am] just when i was gonna start celebrating seems that i was busy doing something close to nothing, but different than the day before | |
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