More than just
caffeine
June 7, 2004
Some extensive studies have revealed coffee may have some
disease-fighting characteristics.
By Peter Jaret, Special to The
Times
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Good Java
(Ken Lively / LAT) |
One after another, foods that were once cast as dietary
bad guys have seen their images rehabilitated. Nuts, eggs,
avocados, even chocolate have been welcomed back into the
kitchen as new research has dispelled worries and even
pointed to potential health benefits.
The latest candidate for a makeover is coffee.
In the 1970s and 1980s, coffee was blamed for a variety of
ills, from high blood pressure to cancer. "The focus of
early research was almost always on finding fault," says
Harvard Medical School epidemiologist Alan Leviton.
"People tended to think of coffee as a vice, so the bias
was that there had to be something wrong with it."
But very few of those worries have been born out by
research, Leviton says. "And now we're starting to see
evidence of some intriguing benefits associated with
coffee."
Findings published over the last five years suggest that
coffee may protect against gallstones, diabetes and even
Parkinson's disease.
Interest in the link between coffee and gallstone disease
first began to percolate in the early 1990s, when
laboratory research demonstrated that caffeine can reduce
the size of these small crystallized stones, and perhaps
prevent them from forming in the first place. "What we
didn't know was whether coffee drinkers out in the real
world would get any benefit," says nutrition researcher
Michael Leitzmann.
In findings published in 1999, he and colleagues at the
Harvard School of Public Health looked at data from 46,008
men who are being followed in the Health Professionals
Follow-up Study. Coffee drinkers, they found, were
significantly less likely to develop gallstones than men
who didn't drink the beverage. In 2002, the same team
looked at 80,898 women who are part of the Women's Health
study. Among women, too, coffee drinkers tended to have
less risk of developing gallstones.
The evidence was especially persuasive because the effect
was dose-dependent. "The more coffee people drank, the
lower their risk of developing gallstones," Leitzmann
says. The risk fell 13% among those who drank one cup a
day, 21% for people who drank two to three cups, and 33%
for people who drank four or more cups a day.
Decaffeinated coffee didn't protect against gallstones,
however, suggesting that the active component may be
caffeine.
Caffeine also appears to be responsible for another
potential benefit for coffee drinkers — a lowered risk of
Parkinson's disease.
In a 2000 study of 8,004 men whose health and diets have
been tracked for 30 years, researchers at the Department
of Veterans Affairs in Honolulu found that coffee drinkers
significantly reduced their odds of developing
Parkinson's, the debilitating disease that affects the
brain and nervous system. In 2001, Harvard School of
Public Health researchers published similar findings from
studies that included more than 130,000 men and women.
"Men who reported drinking the most coffee had the lowest
risk of developing Parkinson's disease," says
epidemiologist Alberto Ascherio, who led the study. Women
also benefited, but only from moderate coffee consumption,
one to three cups a day.
Researchers don't understand why coffee appears to protect
against Parkinson's — although, again, caffeine seems to
be responsible. "When we looked at men who drank
decaffeinated coffee, we didn't find a lower risk,"
Ascherio says. "But when we looked at caffeine from other
sources, such as tea or caffeinated soft drinks, we did
see a protective effect."
Scientists are just beginning to explore how caffeine and
Parkinson's may be linked. The disease results when levels
of the brain chemical dopamine fall, interrupting nerve
signals from the brain to muscles. At the Neurosciences
Institute in La Jolla, researchers Frederick S. Jones and
Anthony H. Stonehouse reported this year that caffeine
increases the expression of dopamine receptors in the
brain.
*
Beyond caffeine
One of the most surprising benefits associated with
drinking coffee is protection against Type 2 diabetes.
In a study of 17,111 men and women published in the
British medical journal the Lancet in 2002, Dutch
researchers reported that people who drank at least seven
cups of coffee a day were half as likely as those who
drank two or fewer cups to develop diabetes. Two other
studies of large groups have confirmed the good news.
Analyzing data from more than 125,000 men and women,
Harvard School of Public Health researchers found that men
who drank six or more cups of coffee daily were half as
likely to develop diabetes. Women who drank six or more
cups a day cut their risk by 30%. A Swedish study
published in 2004, which followed 1,361 women over 18
years, found that the more coffee the women drank, the
lower their odds of developing diabetes.
Researchers suspect that substances other than caffeine
explain why coffee is associated with lowered risk of
diabetes. In fact, caffeine in short-term studies
decreases insulin sensitivity, which should theoretically
worsen the condition, not protect against it. But coffee
is rich in many other substances that are biologically
active, some of which are only beginning to be
investigated.
"Caffeine has received most of the research attention, but
it is only one of hundreds of substances found in coffee,"
says coffee chemist Tomas de Paulis, a researcher at
Vanderbilt University's Institute for Coffee Studies,
which receives funding from coffee manufacturers.
He and his colleagues are investigating substances in
coffee called quinides, which increase the capacity of the
liver to use glucose. That, in theory, should improve
blood sugar control in diabetics. Unlike caffeine, these
substances may be unique to coffee, created during the
process of roasting coffee beans.
Coffee, like tea, is also turning out to be a plentiful
source of antioxidants, which may protect against the
damage caused by unstable free-radical oxygen molecules.
In an analysis published early this year that looked at
the diets of 2,672 Norwegians — among the world's most
avid coffee drinkers — coffee was found to be the biggest
contributor of antioxidants on the menu.
The antioxidants in coffee may also explain preliminary
findings that suggest that coffee drinking may lower the
risk of oral cancer and heart disease. In addition, coffee
is a good source of the mineral magnesium, which could
partly explain why it seems to protect against diabetes.
Diabetics often have abnormally low levels of the mineral.
*
Guilt by association
Why, then, has coffee had a bad reputation for so
long? One reason is guilt by association. In early
studies, coffee drinkers often tended to be smokers and
alcohol drinkers, says Leitzmann, who is now a researcher
at the National Cancer Institute. As a result, some early
studies blamed higher cancer rates on coffee.
"We now know that those risks are really associated with
smoking or excessive alcohol consumption, not drinking
coffee," Leitzmann says.
In other instances, lack of an understanding of biological
mechanisms led to unwarranted concerns. Early studies
showed that pregnant women who reported drinking more
coffee were more likely to miscarry, for example. Coffee
was blamed for miscarriages. Researchers now know that in
early pregnancy, many women find the taste and smell of
coffee unpleasant, as a result of hormonal changes. The
healthier the pregnancy, the stronger those signals, and
the less coffee women tend to drink.
"When the placenta is in place and the pregnancy is a
healthy one, most women get a strong pregnancy signal, so
they drink less coffee. Women who don't have as good an
implantation and are therefore at increased risk of
miscarriage have less of a pregnancy signal, and so they
tend to go on drinking their usual amount of coffee,"
Leviton explains. "Drinking coffee doesn't cause the
miscarriages. It's just a marker for how weak the
pregnancy signal is."
Many of the early worries over coffee surfaced in very
small studies that lacked statistical legitimacy and may
have been biased by a tendency to assume there were
dangers to drinking coffee, Leviton says.
The latest evidence comes from very large studies that
involve tens of thousands of people and whose findings are
generally considered to be more reliable. A few small
studies suggested increased risk of some cancers, for
example, but when scientists in 2000 pooled the available
data from many studies, they found no statistical link
between the disease and coffee drinking.
A few worries persist. Caffeine can aggravate arrhythmias,
or irregular heartbeats, so cardiologists sometimes advise
people with such conditions to switch to decaf. Insomnia
sufferers are also typically advised to give up
caffeinated coffee, especially late in the day and
evening. Because caffeine can make its way into breast
milk, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that
nursing mothers drink decaf coffee or other
non-caffeinated beverages.
Caffeine in coffee also raises blood pressure temporarily,
so people with hypertension might do well to avoid it. But
several extensive studies have shown that coffee drinkers
are no more likely than nondrinkers to suffer chronic high
blood pressure — evidence that coffee doesn't cause
hypertension.
"The real news is that drinking coffee poses no danger to
most people," Leviton says. "If coffee turns out to have
benefits, as some of the new evidence suggests, all the
better."
For now, the findings are preliminary enough that even the
researchers who have turned up benefits say it's too early
to recommend that people who don't drink coffee should
start.
"We need to know more about the mechanisms at work in
conditions like Parkinson's or diabetes before we can feel
comfortable making recommendations," says Peter Martin,
who directs the Institute for Coffee Studies at
Vanderbilt.
Ultimately, Martin says, the latest research is more
likely to yield new drugs based on compounds found in
coffee than recommendations for people to drink the
beverage. Several pharmaceutical companies are already
looking at developing drugs based on components found in
coffee beans.
Still, for the more than 166 million Americans who drink
coffee — up more than 5 million from 2002, according to
figures released by the National Coffee Assn. — the new
findings offer one more reason to love a good strong cup
of java. Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
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