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Caffeine Interferes with Diabetes Control
Caffeine could interfere with the body's
ability to handle blood sugar, thus worsening type 2 diabetes,
U.S. researchers said.
The team at Duke University Medical
Center in North Carolina found a strong correlation between caffeine
intake at mealtime and increased glucose and insulin levels among
people with type 2 diabetes.
The American Diabetes Association
says that at least 90 percent of the 17 million Americans diagnosed
with diabetes have type 2, in which the body either does not produce
enough insulin or cells ignore the insulin, which the body needs
to convert food into energy.
The findings are significant enough
that the researchers recommend people with diabetes consider reducing
or eliminating caffeine from their diets.
"In a healthy person, glucose is
metabolized within an hour or so after eating. Diabetics, however,
do not metabolize glucose as efficiently," said James Lane, a
psychiatry professor who led the study.
"It appears that diabetics who
consume caffeine are likely having a harder time regulating their
insulin and glucose levels than those who don't take caffeine."
Writing in the journal Diabetes
Care, Lane and colleagues said they studied 14 habitual coffee
drinkers with type 2 diabetes.
The researchers put the volunteers
on a controlled diet.
They took their medications, had
their blood tested and then were given caffeine capsules. More
blood was taken then and after giving the volunteers a liquid
meal supplement.
Caffeine had little effect on glucose
and insulin levels when the volunteers fasted, the researchers
found.
But after the liquid meal, those
who were given caffeine had a 21 percent increase in their glucose
level and insulin rose 48 percent.
"The goal of clinical treatment
for diabetes is to keep the person's blood glucose down," Lane
said in a statement.
"It seems that caffeine, by further
impairing the metabolism of meals, is something diabetics ought
to consider avoiding. Some people already watch their diet and
exercise regularly. Avoiding caffeine might be another way to
better manage their disease. In fact, it's possible that staying
away from caffeine could provide bigger benefits altogether."
Reference
Source 89
July 26, 2004
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