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Tuesday, May 02, 2017
Energy Drinks Worse for Your Heart Than Caffeine Alone: Study
Reuters
Drinking 32 ounces of energy drink is
associated with potentially harmful changes in blood pressure and heart
function that are beyond those seen with caffeine alone, according to a
new study.
There are more than 500 energy drink products
on the market, and their increased popularity is matched by a
significant rise in energy drink-associated emergency department visits
and deaths.
American Heart Association
Manufacturers and fans of these products claim
they are as safe as caffeine, but there is little evidence to support
that claim.
Caffeine in doses up to 400 mg (about five
cups of coffee) is generally recognized as safe by the Food and Drug
Administration. While energy drinks usually contain caffeine, little is
known about the safety of some of their other ingredients the study team
writes in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
To see what effects these other components
have, researchers compared physical changes in a group of 18 healthy men
and women after consuming a commercially available energy drink and
after drinking another concoction with the same amount of caffeine but
none of the other ingredients.
Besides 320 mg of caffeine - the amount in
about four cups of coffee - the energy drink contained 4 ounces of
sugar, several B vitamins and a proprietary "energy blend" of taurine
and other ingredients that are often found drinks like Monster Energy,
Red Bull and 5-Hour Energy.
Sachin A. Shah of David Grant Medical Center
on Travis Air Force Base and University of the Pacific in Stockton,
California, and colleagues measured the participants' blood pressure and
used an electrocardiogram (often called an ECG or EKG) to measure heart
electrical activity for 24 hours after the subjects consumed the
drinks.
An ECG change known as QTc prolongation and
sometimes associated with life-threatening irregularities in the
heartbeat was seen after drinking the energy drink, but not after
drinking the caffeine beverage, the study team reports.
Several drugs have been withdrawn from the market just for causing ECG changes of a similar magnitude, the authors note.
Blood pressure increased by close to 5 points
after drinking the energy drink, but by just under 1 point after
drinking the caffeine beverage. Blood pressure also remained elevated
six hours later.
These changes are by no means worrisome for
healthy individuals, the researchers say, but patients with certain
heart conditions might need to exercise caution consuming energy drinks.
Larger studies are needed to evaluate the safety of the noncaffeine ingredients contained in energy drinks, they conclude.
"The energy drink industry claims that their
products are safe because they have no more caffeine than a premium
coffee house coffee," said Dr. Jennifer L. Harris from University of
Connecticut's Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity in Storrs, who
wasn't involved in the study.
"However, energy drinks also contain a
proprietary 'energy blend,' which typically consists of stimulants and
other additives. Some of these ingredients (including taurine and
guarana) have not been FDA-approved as safe in the food supply, and few
studies have tested the effects of caffeine consumption together with
these 'novelty' ingredients," she said by email.
"On top of that, energy drinks are highly
marketed to adolescent boys in ways that encourage risky behavior,
including rapid and excessive consumption," she said. "As a result,
emergency room visits by young people in connection with energy drinks
are rising."
Any research that compares the effects of
consuming energy drinks versus caffeine alone provides important
evidence for public health advocates who have urged the energy drink
companies to stop targeting youth with these potentially harmful
products, Harris added.
More than 5,000 cases of people who got sick
from energy drinks were reported to U.S. poison control centers between
2010 and 2013, and almost half of those cases were in children did not
realize what they were drinking
Energy drinks typically contain high levels of sugar and at least as much caffeine as a cup of coffee.
But the drinks also often tout the energy-boosting effects of a mix of
other ingredients, ranging from taurine and l-carnitine, naturally
occurring amino acids, to ginseng (a Chinese herb typically used in
alternative medicine). But despite this "special blend" of ingredients,
studies suggest energy drinks don't boost attention any better than a cup of coffee does.
Even just one 16-ounce energy drink can
increase blood pressure and stress hormones and could put a healthy
young adult at risk for heart damage, concludes a 2015 Mayo Clinic study.
The American Academy of Pediatrics says energy drinks have "no place" in the diet of children and adolescents.
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