Cola verhoogt bloeddruk, koffie niet.*
Vrouwen die geregeld koffie drinken,
hoeven niet bang te zijn dat hun bloeddruk daardoor stijgt. Dat blijkt uit
onderzoek van wetenschappers van de Harvard School of Public Health in Boston
onder meer dan 150.000 Amerikaanse vrouwen, die twaalf jaar gevolgd werden.
“Daarbij
vonden wij sterke bewijzen die de speculatie weerleggen dat koffieconsumptie bij
vrouwen samengaat met verhoogde bloeddruk”, schreef het team onder leiding van
Wolfgang Winkelmeyer in het vakblad JAMA (Journal of the American Medical
Association). Naar de gevolgen van koffiedrinken bij mannen hebben de
wetenschappers geen onderzoek gedaan. Tussen het gebruik van cola, al of niet
light, bleek wel een verband met hoge bloeddruk te bestaan. De wetenschappers
vermoeden dat het niet de cafeďne in de drank is, die die werking heeft, maar
een ander bestanddeel.
No
Link Found Between Caffeine Intake And Development Of Hypertension In Women
Habitual
coffee drinking is not associated with an increased
risk of hypertension in women, although an
association was found with the consumption of sugared or diet
colas, according to a study in the November 9 issue of JAMA.
Approximately
50 million people in the United States have hypertension, and the prevalence is
increasing, according to background information in the article. Hypertension is
a major risk factor for coronary heart disease,
stroke, and congestive heart failure. Therefore,
even small reductions in the prevalence of hypertension could have a potentially
large public health and financial impact. Several previous studies have
indicated a possible association between caffeine intake and the risk of
hypertension. Short-term studies have demonstrated that caffeine intake acutely
increases blood pressure, but over time, weakening
of this effect does occur. A long-term effect of caffeine intake on the risk of
developing hypertension would be of substantial public health importance given
the widespread consumption of beverages containing caffeine, but currently,
studies of this association are scarce.
Wolfgang
C. Winkelmayer, M.D., Sc.D., of Brigham and Women's Hospital and the Harvard
School of Public Health, Boston, and colleagues conducted a study to determine
whether caffeine intake or consumption of certain caffeine-containing beverages
is associated with an increased risk of incident hypertension in women. The
researchers analyzed data from the Nurses' Health Studies (NHSs) I and II of
155,594 U.S. women free from physician-diagnosed hypertension, who were
followed-up over 12 years (1990-1991 to 2002-2003). Caffeine intake and possible
confounders were ascertained from regularly administered questionnaires.
Over
the 12 years, 19,541 incident cases of physician-diagnosed hypertension were
reported in NHS I and 13,536 in NHS II. In both cohorts, no linear association
between caffeine consumption and risk of incident hypertension was observed
after multivariate adjustment. When studying individual classes of caffeinated
beverages, habitual coffee consumption was not associated with increased risk of
hypertension. By contrast, consumption of cola beverages was associated with an
increased risk of hypertension, independent of whether it was sugared or diet
cola.
"In
this study with more than 1.4 million person-years of follow-up [the number of
women in the study times the number of years of follow-up per woman], the
relevant exposures and outcomes have been found valid and accurate, and coffee
intake was updated to reflect changes in individual behavior. We found strong
evidence to refute speculation that coffee consumption is associated with an
increased risk of hypertension in women," the authors write.
Concerning
the link found between colas and hypertension, the researchers write: "? we
speculate that it is not caffeine but perhaps some other compound contained in
soda-type soft drinks that may be responsible for the increased risk in
hypertension. If these associations are causal, they may have considerable
impact on public health."
(November
2005)