Eat well: Four reasons to have another cup of coffee

Some like it hot, some like it iced, and some just don’t like it at all. Until recently, coffee was on the list of habits to break if you really wanted to be healthy. Not anymore.

Coffee

Source: SBS Food

of the research – the most powerful method to weigh up scientific evidence – judge the current evidence as mostly in favour of drinking coffee. Coffee drinking is linked to a decreased risk of premature death, type 2 diabetes and some types of cancer.

However, some people will need to be cautious of the amount. Heavy coffee intake has been linked to an increased risk of lung cancer and can exacerbate heart problems.

Life expectancy

Coffee drinkers live longer. A review of including more than 970,000 people found those who usually drank the most coffee had a 14 per cent lower risk of dying prematurely from any cause, compared with those who drank the least.

Even drinking just one to two cups a day conferred an 8 per cent lower risk.

Decaffeinated coffee drinkers who had two to four cups a day still had a 14 per cent lower relative risk of premature death than those who didn’t drink coffee at all.

Liver cancer

Coffee drinkers, particularly men, have a . This is important as liver disease is the sixth-most-common cancer in the world and is more common in men.

Results from six studies, based on the total number of cups of coffee drunk per day, found the relative risk of liver cancer was 14 per cent lower for every extra cup.

Research shows that naturally occurring coffee components, including and cafestol, have direct cancer-protection and anti-inflammatory properties. Coffee appears able to up-regulate biochemical pathways in the liver that protect the body from toxins, including and other carcinogenic compounds.

Type 2 diabetes

Coffee drinkers have a lower risk of type 2 diabetes. Across of more than one million adults, those who drank three or more cups of coffee a day had a 21 per cent lower relative risk of developing type 2 diabetes compared to those who never or rarely drank it.

For those drinking six or more cups a day, the risk was lowered by 33 per cent.

Interestingly, the risk was lower for both regular and decaffeinated coffee drinkers. For each cup of regular caffeinated coffee there was an extra 9 per cent lower relative risk of developing diabetes and a 6 per cent lower risk for each cup of decaffeinated coffee.
Choc-raisin log aka Chocolate, coffee and raisin rolls
Source: Alan Benson
If you like your caffeine fix in edible form, check out our collection of , including this impressive from 's Anneka Manning.  

 

The active components of coffee help reduce , the imbalance between free radicals and antioxidants. Coffee contains , which has been shown to improve glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity, and , which increases the rate muscles use up blood glucose, as well as having immune-stimulating and anti-inflammatory properties.

Prostate cancer

Coffee drinkers have a lower risk of prostate cancer. Across that included more than 530,000 men, those who drank the most coffee had a 10 per cent lower relative risk of developing prostate cancer than those who drank the least.

For every extra two cups of coffee drunk per day, cancer risk decreased by a small extra amount of 2.5 per cent.

However, when prostate cancer grade was factored in, there was no protective effect for advanced or terminal types of prostate cancer.

Now, the reasons to watch your coffee intake.

Lung cancer

Watch you total coffee intake to lower your risk for lung cancer. of more than 100,000 adults found those with the highest coffee intakes had a 27 per cent higher relative risk of lung cancer.

Every extra two cups of coffee per day was associated with an 11 per cent greater risk of developing lung cancer.

There were only two studies on decaffeinated coffee and they had the opposite finding: a 34 per cent lower relative risk for high decaffeinated coffee intakes.

Pregnancy

Drinking more that one to two cups of coffee when pregnant , but it’s worth being cautious.

The relationship between coffee and risk of miscarriage and other adverse pregnancy outcomes in older research studies was more likely to be seen in poorly designed studies, especially for outcomes like low birth weight and congenital anomalies.

Some of the risk of miscarriage was probably confounded by the fact that women with severe morning sickness, which is a sign of good implantation of the embryo, tend to cut down on coffee due to nausea.
Ham and garlic chive breakfast scrolls
Ham and garlic chive breakfast scrolls Source: Benito Martin
Another way to drink it: , served here with

 

It also appears that cigarette smoking, which tended to be associated with coffee consumption in older studies, was not always adjusted for, so some of the risk is likely to have been due to smoking.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists pregnant women drink less than 200 milligrams of caffeine per day. This is equivalent to one to two cups of coffee a day (instant coffee has 50-100 mg caffeine per cup; brewed coffee about 100-150 mg).

Blood pressure

The last caution relates to your . High intakes of caffeine can and plasma , another heart disease risk factor. Coffee is not associated, however, with the long-term risk of heart disease.

People with high blood pressure or heart conditions, older people, adolescents, children and those who don’t usually drink coffee will be more sensitive to caffeine found in “energy” drinks, cola and coffee, and it can take longer to metabolise. Switching to decaffeinated coffee will help.

It’s important to note that most of the research on coffee comes from population-based observational studies that measure association and not causation. That is partly because it would be very hard to do a randomised controlled trial of drinking more coffee and measuring health outcomes over many years. But there’s a thought – anyone like to volunteer for that study?

 

, is Professor in Nutrition and Dietetics at .

 

This article was originally published on . Read the .


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6 min read
Published 26 May 2015 12:08pm
Updated 26 May 2015 12:14pm
Source: The Conversation

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