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Senior Citizen Health & Medicine

Coffee Drinking Associated with Lower Risk for Alcohol-Related Liver Disease

If coffee prevents cirrhosis, senior citizens should be safe, since most prefer coffee to sex

June 13, 2006 – Most senior citizens should be safe from developing the liver disease alcoholic cirrhosis. New research says coffee may reduce the risk of cirrhosis. An old study says senior citizens had rather give up sex than their coffee. The new report is in the June 12 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.

(See story in sidebar on senior citizens and coffee.)

 

Related Stories

 
 

Most Adults Won’t Give Up Sex for Staying Young, Senior Citizens Won’t Give Up Coffee

April 20, 2004 – What are Americans willing to give up for a drink from the “Fountain of Youth?” Not sex, for those 18 to 64, and not coffee for those over 64. More...

Even Excessive Coffee Drinking Does Not Increase Risk of Coronary Heart Disease

April 25, 2006 – The latest study of coffee consumption did not find any evidence that coffee consumption, at any volume, increases the risk of coronary heart disease. In fact, the heaviest coffee drinkers in the study had the lowest risk. This certainly challenges studies that many senior citizens have read about for years, saying the stimulant in caffeine is bad for your heart. It still has not stopped many seniors from drinking coffee - research in 2004 said seniors would not give up coffee for sex. Read more...

Is Coffee the Solution to Everything from Cancer to Female Sex Drive?

Latest study says coffee protects women at high risk of breast cancer

Jan. 18, 2006 – Women at high risk of breast cancer before reaching age 70 reduced this pending danger by 80 percent by drinking six or more cups of coffee a day, says a new study – just one of several recent reports claiming health benefits of coffee. Health conscious senior citizens, always seeking the latest miracle drug, may find they have been taking it all along. Read more...


> Read more on Health & Medicine

> Read more on Nutrition & Vitamins

 

Cirrhosis progressively destroys healthy liver tissue and replaces it with scar tissue. Viruses such as hepatitis C can cause cirrhosis, but long-term, heavy alcohol use is the most common cause of the disease in developed countries, according to background information in the article.

Most alcohol drinkers, however, never develop cirrhosis; other factors that may play a role include genetics, diet and nutrition, smoking and the interaction of alcohol with other toxins that damage the liver.

Arthur L. Klatsky, M.D., and colleagues at the Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program, Oakland, Calif., analyzed data from 125,580 individuals (55,247 men and 70,333 women) who did not report liver disease when they had baseline examinations, between 1978 and 1985.

Participants filled out a questionnaire to provide information about how much alcohol, coffee and tea they drank per day during the past year. Some of the individuals also had their blood tested for levels of certain liver enzymes; the enzymes are released into the bloodstream when the liver is diseased or damaged.

By the end of 2001, 330 participants had been diagnosed with cirrhosis, including 199 with alcoholic cirrhosis. For each cup of coffee they drank per day, participants were 22 percent less likely to develop alcoholic cirrhosis. Drinking coffee was also associated with a slight reduction in risk for other types of cirrhosis.

Among those who had their blood drawn, liver enzyme levels were higher among individuals who drank more alcohol, indicating liver disease or damage; however, those who drank both alcohol and coffee had lower levels than those who drank alcohol but did not drink coffee, with the strongest link among the heaviest drinkers.

Tea drinking was not related to reduced risk in the study, suggesting that it is not caffeine that is responsible for the relationship between coffee and reduced cirrhosis risk.

"Previous reports are disparate with respect to whether the apparently protective coffee ingredient is caffeine; in our opinion this issue is quite unresolved," the authors write.

The findings do not suggest that physicians prescribe coffee to prevent alcoholic cirrhosis, the authors continue. "Even if coffee is protective, the primary approach to reduction of alcoholic cirrhosis is avoidance or cessation of heavy alcohol drinking," they conclude.

"Assuming causality, the data do suggest that coffee intake may partly explain the variability of cirrhosis risk in alcohol consumers. Basic research about hepatic coffee-ethanol interactions is warranted, but we should keep in mind that coffee might represent only one of a number of potential cirrhosis risk modulators."

Editor's Note: This study was supported by a grant from the Kaiser Foundation Research Institute. Data collection from 1978 to 1985 was supported by a grant from the Alcoholic Beverage Medical Research Foundation, Baltimore, Md.

 

 

 

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