One
Cup Of Coffee A Day Can
Produce Caffeine Addiction
It's official -- you really do need
that coffee in the morning and if you don't get it, you really
are in withdrawal, researchers said.
As little as one cup of coffee
a day can produce caffeine addiction, researchers at Johns Hopkins
University in Baltimore said.
"Caffeine is the world's most commonly
used stimulant, and it's cheap and readily available so people
can maintain their use of caffeine quite easily," said Roland
Griffiths, a professor of psychiatry and neuroscience who led
a review of 170 years' worth of studies on caffeine.
"The latest research demonstrates,
however, that when people don't get their usual dose they can
suffer a range of withdrawal symptoms, including headache, fatigue
and difficulty concentrating. They may even feel like they have
the flu with nausea and muscle pain."
Griffiths and colleagues are pressing
for caffeine addiction to be included in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, considered the bible of mental disorders,
as well as other references.
He and Laura Juliano of American
University in Washington looked at 57 experimental studies and
nine surveys to validate what any coffee drinker could have told
them -- missing that daily cup causes fatigue, grumpiness and
often severe headache.
Experiments have shown that 50
percent of people got headaches when their java was taken away
and 13 percent were sick enough to lose time at work.
Writing in the October issue of
the journal Psychopharmacology, Griffiths and Juliano also said
it was possible to free oneself of caffeine addiction.
"We teach a systematic method of
gradually reducing caffeine consumption over time by substituting
decaffeinated or non-caffeinated products. Using such a method
allows people to reduce or eliminate withdrawal symptoms," Griffiths
said.
In North America, 80 percent to
90 percent of adults drink caffeine regularly. Average daily intake
in the United States is about 280 milligrams, found in one to
two mugs of coffee or three to five cans of soft drink.
Reference
Source 89
September 30, 2004
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