-Advertisement-
  About AE   About NHM   Contact Us   Terms of Use   Copyright Info   Privacy Policy   Advertising Policies   Site Map
   
Custom Search of AE Site
spacer spacer

Cafe, Olé!

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence

Anaheim, CA (3/24/99)- Good news java junkies- not only is coffee not very addictive, along with its caffeinated cousins tea and cocoa, it appears to offer several potential health benefits, according to new research presented at the national meeting of the American Chemical Society.

French researchers reported that caffeine has no affect on the area of the brain involved with addiction at doses of one to three cups of coffee per day. Astrid Nehlig, Ph.D., of the French National Health and Medical Research Institute conducted research with laboratory animals that confirmed that while moderate does of caffeine contribute to increased alertness and energy, dependence does not occur at those levels.

In this respect, caffeine appears to act differently from amphetamines, cocaine, morphine or nicotine, Nehlig says. These drugs are known to trigger functional activity in the shell of the nucleus accumbens, the part of the brain responsible for addiction even at low doses, she says.

In a related presentation, researchers from the University of Bristol reviewed a decade of research into caffeine's influence on cognition and mood. The survey revealed that a cup of coffee can help in the performance of tasks requiring sustained attention, even during low alertness situations such as after lunch, at night or when a person has a cold.

Tea drinkers also got some good news. Researchers from the Japanese Food Research Institute reported new data about a major group of compounds in green tea called catechins. These compounds have anti-oxidative, as well as antibacterial and even antiviral potency, the researchers noted.American researchers reported that these same compounds inhibited atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries in hamsters during a 10 week dose-response experiment. Both green and black tea lowered lipids and lipid oxidation in the hamsters, even at very low dilutions, according to a University of Scranton investigator.

Possibly the best news of all is that even chocolate has previously unexpected potential health benefits. In one study presented at the conference, researchers reported that cacao liquor, an ingredient of chocolate and cocoa, contains antioxidative polyphenolic substances. In animal studies, these compounds showed anti-ulceric activity in rats, as well as an inhibitory effect on tumor promotion in mouse skin. A related in vitro study suggested that these polyphenolic compounds, specifically the procyanidins and oligomeric procyanidins that contribute to the flavor of chocolate and cocoa, may also offer cardiovascular benefits.

Chocolate appears to be a particularly good source of antioxidants, reported by Joseph Vinson, Ph.D. His work suggests that the quality and quantity of the antioxidants in chocolate is very high relative to other common foods and beverages such as black tea, red wine, apples, raisins, pinto beans and other plant products. Dark chocolate contained four times the level of polyphenol antioxidants compared to kidney beans, which have one of the highest levels found in fruits or vegetables. Cocoa powder was even higher, containing seven times the amount of antioxidants found in the beans.

Related information on the Internet
chocolate.com

Copyright 1999© Info

What's News Index

Feedback


 
Today's Health and
BioScience News
Science Update Archives Factoids Newsmaker Interviews
Archive

 
Custom Search on the AE Site

 

-Advertisement-