Drinking up to six cups of coffee a day might not
lead to early death but rather help the heart, especially for women, a new study
has showed.
The findings were published in the June 17 issue
of the Annals of Internal Medicine, published by the American College of
Physicians.
"Our results suggest that long-term, regular
coffee consumption does not increase the risk of death and probably has several
beneficial effects on health," said leading researcher Dr. Esther Lopez-Garcia,
assistant professor of preventive medicine at the Autonomous University of
Madrid, Spain.
Lopez-Garcia stressed that the findings may only
hold true for healthy people.
"People with any disease or condition should ask
their doctor about their risks, because caffeine still has an acute effect on
short-term increase of blood pressure," she said.
The Spanish team looked at data of nearly 42,000
U.S. men who participated in the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study from 1986
to 2004 and more than 84,000 U.S. women who had participated in the Nurse Health
Study from 1980 to 2004 to assess relationships between coffee drinking and the
risks of dying from heart disease, cancer, or any cause. All participants were
free of heart disease and cancer at the start of the study.
The participants completed questionnaires every
two to four years, including information about their coffee drinking, other
dietary habits, smoking and health conditions.
The research team looked at the frequency of
death from any cause, death due to heart disease, and death due to cancer among
people with different coffee-drinking habits, comparing them to those who didn't
drink the brew with other risk factors, including diet, smoking and body size
under control.
The researchers found that women who drank two or
three cups of caffeinated coffee daily had a 25 percent lower risk of death from
heart disease during the follow-up than non-drinkers. Women also had an
18-percent lower death risk from a cause other than cancer or heart disease
compared with non-coffee drinkers.
For men, drinking two to three cups of
caffeinated coffee daily was a "wash" -- not associated with either an increased
or a decreased risk of death during the follow up.
The lower death rate was mainly due to a lower
risk for heart disease deaths, the researchers found, while no link was
discovered for coffee drinking and cancer deaths. The relationship did not seem
to be directly related to caffeine, according to the researchers, since those
who drank decaffeinated coffee also had a lower death rate than those who didn't
drink either kind of coffee.
In the past, studies have come up with mixed
results on the health effects of coffee, with some finding coffee increased the
risk of death and others not.
More recently, research has found coffee drinking
linked to a lower risk of type 2 diabetes and some cancers while preventing the
development of cardiovascular disease, Lopez-Garcia said.
The strength of her current study, she said, is
based on the large number of participants and long follow-up period.
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