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Java Before The Gym? Think Again
Having a coffee fix just
before a workout may not be the best idea, a new study suggests.
Researchers in Switzerland found that the amount of caffeine
in just two cups of coffee limits the body's ability to increase
blood flow to the heart during exercise.
"Whenever we do a physical exercise, myocardial blood flow has
to increase in order to match the increased need of oxygen. We
found that caffeine may adversely affect this mechanism. It partly
blunts the needed increase in flow," Dr. Philipp A. Kaufmann,
of the University Hospital Zurich and Center for Integrative
Human Physiology, said in a prepared statement.
The study included 18 young, healthy people who were regular
coffee drinkers. They did not drink any coffee for 36 hours prior
to study testing. The researchers used high-tech PET scans to
measure the participants' heart blood flow before and after they
rode a stationary bike. Ten of them did this in normal conditions,
and eight did the exercise in a chamber that simulated being
at about 15,000 feet altitude.
Both groups repeated the testing procedure after swallowing
a tablet containing 200 milligrams of caffeine -- the amount
contained in two cups of coffee.
As reported in the Jan. 17 issue of the Journal of the American
College of Cardiology , the caffeine did not affect heart
blood flow when the participants were inactive. However, measurements
taken immediately after exercise showed a slowdown in heart
blood flow after they'd taken the caffeine tablets, compared
to their previous results.
Heart blood flow was 22 percent lower in those who exercised
in normal air pressure and 39 percent lower in those who exercised
in the high-altitude chamber, the researchers report.
They believe caffeine may block certain receptors in the walls
of blood vessels, interfering with the normal signaling process
that causes blood vessels to dilate in response to exercise.
"Although these findings seem not to have a clinical importance
in healthy volunteers, they may raise safety questions in patients
with reduced coronary flow reserve, as seen in coronary artery
disease, particularly before physical exercise and at high-altitude
exposure," the study authors wrote.
While some people regard caffeine as a stimulant, this study
suggests it may not increase athletic performance.
"We now have good evidence that, at the level of myocardial
blood flow, caffeine is not a useful stimulant. It may be a stimulant
at the cerebral level in terms of being more awake and alert,
which may subjectively give the feeling of having better physical
performance. But I now would not recommend that any athlete drink
caffeine before sports," Kaufmann said.
Iowa State University has more about caffeine
and athletes .
SOURCE: American College of Cardiology, news release, Jan.
13, 2006 Reference
Source 62
January
17,
2006
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