Translate to your own language

Become a member of ADDY as me with my link and get $25 to kickstart your own investing journey 🏠

September 27, 2014

Coffee boost could help aging muscles, study finds

Coffee boost could help aging muscles
By zirconicusso on FreeDigitalPhotos.net


Score another point for coffee in the debate over its health effects.
A study  released at the Society of Experimental Biology, argues that caffeine can help boost older muscles and could thereby help prevent falls and injuries among the elderly. The aim of the study was to determine whether the age of a muscle was a factor in how it reacted to caffeine.
Using two different types of muscles from mice – the diaphragm and a leg muscle – sports-medicine researchers from Coventry University in Britain observed that elderly muscles were still stimulated by caffeine, though less so than younger adult muscles. The study’s main author Jason Tallis said that “despite a reduced effect in the elderly, caffeine may still provide performance-enhancing benefits.”
This comes after a U.S. study published in The New England Journal of Medicine indicated that coffee drinkers were less likely to die from various diseases such as stroke or respiratory illness. As The New York Times reported in 2012, this could be because of various antioxidants found in coffee (although some coffee drinkers often have other habits which aren’t so good, such as smoking).
Researchers urge caution in drawing major correlations in these studies between coffee and health. The point of the Coventry University study’s results is the boost, though diminished, caffeine provides to elderly muscles. But as a stimulant, it still carries the risk of higher blood pressure and an increased heart rate.
The debate is likely far from over.



No comments:

Post a Comment

Search This Blog