Too Much Caffeine Ups
Risk of Kidney Stones
People who are prone to kidney stones
should limit their caffeine intake, new research suggests.
When investigators gave people
with a history of kidney stones a dose of caffeine equivalent
to that found in two cups of coffee, they began to excrete more
calcium in their urine, putting them at increased risk of forming
kidney stones.
Study author Dr. Linda K. Massey
told Reuters Health that stone suffers should limit themselves
to less than two cups of coffee per day or a comparable amount
of caffeine from other sources. And that limit of two cups means,
literally, 16 ounces-not two enormous mugs of coffee, which can
contain much more caffeine, she said.
Massey, who is based at Washington
State University in Spokane, explained that a spike in urinary
calcium increases the risk of stones because calcium is an important
ingredient in kidney stones -- so the more there is, the more
likely there will be stones.
Previous research has shown that
people who do not tend to form kidney stones also excrete more
calcium in their urine after consuming caffeine.
To investigate whether the same
thing happens in people prone to stones, Massey and Dr. Roger
A. L. Sutton at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver,
asked 39 people with kidney stones and nine who never had stones
to drink caffeine added to water after 14 hours of fasting. The
researchers tested their urine 2 hours before and after they consumed
caffeine.
As the investigators report in
the Journal of Urology, after caffeine, the stone-formers showed
an increase in calcium, sodium, magnesium and citrate in their
urine. The same pattern also occurred in the people with no history
of kidney stones.
In an interview, Massey explained
that more calcium and sodium in urine likely increases the risk
of kidney stones, while increases in magnesium and citrate appear
to protect people from kidney stones.
However, after plugging these changes
into a formula that predicts kidney stone risk, Massey said, "The
increase in magnesium and citrate did not offset the increase
in calcium."
SOURCE: The Journal of Urology,
August 2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 8, 2004
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