咖啡的功与过?
(2011-09-28 12:45:47)
标签:
保健咖啡抑郁症健康 |
分类: 健康贴士 |
如同茶叶,咖啡亦是人们日常生活中特别喜爱的饮料。我曾经说在美国生活“一定要闻得惯各种各样的香水,一定要喝得下各种各样的咖啡,一定要看得惯各式各样的发型,一定要吃得下各种各样的汉堡,等等”。由此可见咖啡在人们日常生活中的地位,但长期以来人们就从未间断过关于“饮用咖啡是否有益或有害”的争论。这不,最近又有研究人员指正“每天饮用4杯或更多咖啡的女性较少出现情绪紊乱,特别是抑郁症”。关于这一结果大家是否相信呢?请阅读原文吧!
Lots of Coffee Might Lower Depression Risk: Study
Women who had four or more cups a day were 20% less likely to suffer mood disorder
MONDAY, Sept. 26 (HealthDay News) -- Coffee lovers, take heart: Women who drink four or more cups of caffeinated coffee daily seem to have a lower risk of depression than those who don't drink java or stop at one cup a day, a new study suggests.
Although it's way too early to start recommending regular coffee consumption as a way to prevent depression, the findings may comfort those who feel guilty about their habit.
"This may lessen concerns that caffeine consumption will have a negative impact," said Dr. Christopher Cargile, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral science at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine. "Caffeine at high doses has long been associated with worsening of anxiety and other psychiatric illness, and at times this has lead to lingering concerns that it might be best to limit its use."
Cargile was not involved with the study, which
appears in the Sept. 26 issue of the
The lion's share of caffeine in the world -- 80 percent -- is consumed in the form of coffee and caffeine is already the most widely used central nervous system stimulant in the world.
Researchers have probed caffeine's effect on heart health, markers of inflammation and cancer (generally the effects are benign or even positive), but there's been relatively little research into its effects on mood.
What little research has been done has generally found a salubrious effect, with more coffee decreasing depressive symptoms and even being associated with a lower risk of suicide.
"Caffeine has short-term positive effects on mood, subjective feelings of having more energy and being more awake in the short term," said study senior author Dr. Alberto Ascherio, who is a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.
It seemed natural "to see whether long-term coffee consumption associated with a lower risk of developing depression," he added.
These authors tracked almost 51,000 women, averaging age 63, who were participating in the Nurses' Health Study. None of the women reported being depressed at the beginning of the study and none were on antidepressants.
Depression was measured by new diagnoses accompanied by long-term use of antidepressants.
Women who drank four cups of coffee or more a day had a 20 percent reduced risk for depression and those imbibing two to three cups daily had a 15 percent decreased risk, compared to those drinking one cup or less daily.
Decaffeinated versions of the drink didn't seem to be linked at all with depression.
A relationship between caffeinated coffee and depression does make a certain amount of biological sense, experts say.
"Caffeine is known to affect the release of several neurotransmitters, including dopamine and serotonin, that had been implicated in regulating mood and depression," said Ascherio, who is also professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.
But those are short-term effects and "we [still] don't really know why coffee [over] years can decrease depression," he said.
"If caffeine has some antidepressant effect, we may be able to find compounds with an even stronger antidepressant effect," Ascherio said.
First, though, researchers need to determine if there is a cause-and-effect relationship at work here.
"Currently there's just too much we don't know about the cause-and-effect relationship that may be producing these findings," said Cargile, who is also regional associate dean of Texas A&M's Bryan-College Station campus.
SOURCES: Alberto Ascherio, M.D., Dr.P.H., professor,
epidemiology and nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, and
professor, medicine, Harvard Medical School; Christopher Cargile,
M.D., associate professor, psychiatry and behavioral science, and
regional associate dean, Bryan-College Station campus, Texas
A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine;
Sept. 26, 2011,