Coffee polyphenols may suppress body fat accumulation

A research paper just published in the American Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism adds to the list of potential benefits from coffee. The authors state:

“The prevalence of obesity is increasing globally, and obesity is a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. We investigated the effects of coffee polyphenols (CPP), which are abundant in coffee and consumed worldwide, on diet-induced body fat accumulation.”

They fed the animal subjects either a control diet, a high-fat diet, or a high-fat diet supplemented with 0.5% to 1.0% CPP for 2 to 15 weeks. What did the data show?

Supplementation with CPP significantly reduced body weight gain, abdominal and liver fat accumulation, and infiltration of macrophages [inflammatory white blood cells] into adipose tissues. Energy expenditure evaluated by indirect calorimetry was significantly increased in CPP-fed mice.”

The authors delineated the details of the genetic expression and molecular signaling elicited by coffee polyphenols, concluding:

“These findings indicate that CPP enhances energy metabolism and reduces lipogenesis by downregulating SREBP-1c and related molecules, which leads to the suppression of body fat accumulation.”

Caffeine consumption during pregnancy is not associated with pre-term birth

The notion that caffeine consumption during pregnancy is a risk factor for pre-term birth does not hold up in an extensive meta-analysis published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. The authors state:

“The effect of caffeine intake during pregnancy on the risk of preterm delivery has been studied for the past 3 decades with inconsistent results…We performed a meta-analysis examining the association between caffeine consumption during pregnancy and risk of preterm birth.”

They identified 15 cohort and 7 case-control studies that met inclusion criteria among MEDLINE and EMBASE articles published between 1966 and July 2010. What did the data show?

“The combined odds ratios (ORs) obtained by using fixed-effects models for cohort studies were 1.11, 1.10, and 1.08 for risk of preterm birth comparing the highest with the lowest level of caffeine intake (or no intake)during the first, second, and third trimesters, respectively. Results for the case-control studies yielded no associations for the first, second, or third trimesters.”

In other words, as they state in their conclusion, no statistically significant risk from caffeine consumption emerged from the data:

“In this meta-analysis, we observed no important association between caffeine intake during pregnancy and the risk of preterm birth for cohort and case-control studies.”

Adolescence, a dangerous time for alcohol excess—but so is anytime

Proceedings of the National AcademyAdding more concern to the reported increase in heavy alcohol consumption among adolescents is the emerging science regarding alcohol’s effect on the brain. This research just published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences elucidates the mechanism by which binge drinking damages the developing brain.

“Binge alcohol consumption in adolescents is increasing, and studies in animal models show that adolescence is a period of high vulnerability to brain insults. The purpose of the present study was to determine the deleterious effects of binge alcohol on hippocampal neurogenesis…”

The authors made a number of startling observations regarding the effect of alcohol on the brain’s center for short-term memory and adrenal regulation, the hippocampus:

“Heavy binge alcohol consumption over 11 mo dramatically and persistently decreased hippocampal proliferation and neurogenesis…Alcohol significantly decreased the number of actively dividing type 1, 2a, and 2b cell types…suggesting that alcohol interferes with the division and migration of hippocampal preneuronal progenitors. Furthermore, the lasting alcohol-induced reduction in hippocampal neurogenesis paralleled an increase in neural degeneration mediated by nonapoptotic pathways.”

Yikes. The authors sum up their findings with these memorable comments:

“Altogether, these results demonstrate that the hippocampal neurogenic niche during adolescence is highly vulnerable to alcoholThis lasting effect, observed 2 mo after alcohol discontinuation, may underlie the deficits in hippocampus-associated cognitive tasks that are observed in alcoholics.”

Journal of NeuroscienceA fascinating paper published last month in the Journal of Neuroscience now reveals how alcohol feeds an immune inflammatory attack on the brain:

Toll-like receptors play an important role in the innate immune response, although emerging evidence indicates their role in brain injury and neurodegeneration. Alcohol abuse induces brain damage and can sometimes lead to neurodegeneration. We recently found that ethanol can promote TLR4 signaling in glial cells by triggering the induction of inflammatory mediators and causing cell death, suggesting that the TLR4 response could be an important mechanism of ethanol-induced neuroinflammation.”

This is an extremely persuasive argument for moderation for anyone interesting in preserving brain health.

The authors go on to report that TLR4 is critical for ethanol-induced inflammatory signaling in glial cells by demonstrating that ‘turning off’ TLR4 prevents the neuroinflammatory brain damage:

“Our results demonstrate, for the first time, that whereas chronic ethanol intake upregulates…cytokine levels [interleukin (IL)-1β, tumor necrosis factor-{alpha}, IL-6] in the cerebral cortex,…TLR4 deficiency protects against ethanol-induced glial activation, induction of inflammatory mediators, and apoptosis. Our findings support the critical role of the TLR4 response in the neuroinflammation, brain injury, and possibly in the neurodegeneration induced by chronic ethanol intake.”

Science Translational Medicine 0710For us the main message is that excessive alcohol consumption fires up the brain’s glial cells (immune cells) and the resultant neuroinflammation does serious damage to the brain. This important research was highlighted in an editorial published last week in Science Translational Medicine which contains some notable comments:

“Ethanol is the most widely used psychotropic substance in the world, and chronic ethanol abuse leads to harmful changes in virtually every organ system in the body. Notably, this includes the brain, where consumption of alcohol can lead to irreversible changes in cognition, mood, and behavior. Although it has been known that this often involves degenerative, inflammatory-mediated processes, their precise nature has not been characterized. In a recent article, Alfonso-Loeches and colleagues report that much of the ethanol-induced inflammation in the brain depends on signaling through Toll-like receptors (TLRs). These receptors participate in innate immunity responses to infection but are also implicated in reactions to injury and degeneration in the brain.”

The editorial concludes with the compelling comparison of the brain damage done by activation by alcohol of neuroinflammation through Toll-like receptors with other common neurodegenerative conditions:

“These results suggest that TLRs play a critical role in alcohol-related brain changes, just as they have been previously implicated in Alzheimer’s disease, ischemic brain injury, and HIV infection.”

Inflammation ResearchBesides curtailing excess and enjoying alcohol only in moderation we may be able to use coffee as protective therapy. There is abundant evidence of the benefit of coffee for the liver, including this recent study published in the journal Inflammation Research. The authors present data that:

“Treatment with caffeine significantly attenuated the elevated serum aminotransferase enzymes and reduced the severe extent of hepatic cell damage, steatosis and the immigration of inflammatory cells… Furthermore, caffeine decreased serum and tissue inflammatory cytokines levels, tissue lipid peroxidation and inhibited the necrosis of hepatocytes. Kupffer cells isolated from ethanol-fed mice produced high amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), whereas Kupffer cells from caffeine treatment mice produced less ROS and TNF-α.”

The authors conclude:

“These findings suggest that caffeine may represent a novel, protective strategy against alcoholic liver injury by attenuating oxidative stress and inflammatory response.”

Experimental NeurologyCould this protective effect extend to the brain? There’s a lot of emerging evidence that suggests the answer is ‘yes’. Fascinating research published last month in the journal Experimental Neurology demonstrates that caffeine protects the brain from the kind of damage involved in Parkinson’s disease caused by pesticides:

“Environmental exposures suspected of contributing to the pathophysiology of Parkinson’s disease (PD) include potentially neurotoxic pesticides, which have been linked to an increased risk of PD. Conversely, possible protective factors such as…caffeine have been linked to a reduced risk of the disease. Here we assessed whether caffeine alters dopaminergic neuron loss induced by exposure to environmentally relevant pesticides (paraquat and maneb) over 8 weeks.”

The data led to a conclusion that increases my enthusiasm for exercising the French press:

Caffeine at 20 mg/kg significantly reduced TH+ neuron loss (to 85% of the respective control). The results demonstrate the neuroprotective potential of caffeine in a chronic pesticide exposure model of model of PD.”

Journal of Alzheimer's DiseaseAs for Alzheimer’s disease, a supplemental issue of the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease has no less than 22 papers on the benefits of caffeine for AD and other neurodegenerative disorders. I suggest you have a look, drink alcohol in moderation (or not at all if you prefer), and enjoy your coffee and tea if there are no contraindications.

With alcohol, as with so many other substances and stimuli, we can appreciate the principle of hormesis: a small amount may have benefit while a larger amount is harmful.

More evidence that coffee helps blood sugar and liver inflammation

Journal of Agricultural and Food ChemistryYet another study on the benefits of coffee was just published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. This ones demonstrates how this salubrious beverage improves insulin function and fatty liver by reducing inflammation. The authors observe:

“Epidemiological surveys have demonstrated that habitual coffee consumption reduces the risk of type 2 diabetes. The aim of this work was to study the antidiabetic effect of coffee and caffeine in spontaneously diabetic KK-Ay mice.”

The mice were not taken to Starbucks for mini espresso shots, but were…

“…given regular drinking water (controls) or 2-fold diluted coffee for 5 weeks.”

The results were pretty amazing:

“Coffee ingestion ameliorated the development of hyperglycemia and improved insulin sensitivity. White adipose tissue mRNA levels of inflammatory cytokines (MCP-1, IL-6, and TNFα), adipose tissue MCP-1 concentration, and serum IL-6 concentration in the coffee group were lower than the control group. Moreover, coffee ingestion improved the fatty liver.”

The authors summed up their findings by stating:

“…coffee exerts a suppressive effect on hyperglycemia by improving insulin sensitivity, partly due to reducing inflammatory cytokine expression and improving fatty liver. Moreover, caffeine may be one of the effective antidiabetic compounds in coffee.”

Coffee protects against fatty liver disease

Digestive Diseases and SciencesThere seems to be one study after another about the benefits of coffee. This paper just published in the journal Digestive Diseases and Sciences verifies that coffee protects against Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD), the most common cause of non-infectious hepatitis and a growing cause of liver failure. I very often see elevated liver enzymes on laboratory tests; no wonder, since this is commonly fueled by insulin resistance. The authors of this study began by observing…

“The benefits of coffee on abnormal liver biochemistry, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma have been reported…this study aims to investigate if coffee use has any relationship with bright liver, measured by ultrasound bright liver score (BLS), in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and which relationship, if any, is present with BMI and insulin resistance.”

‘Bright liver’ refers to the appearance of a fatty liver on ultrasound imaging, and a higher BLS measurement means more fat deposits in the liver. What did they find?

Less fatty liver involvement is present in coffee vs. non-coffee drinkers. Odds ratios show that obesity, higher insulin resistance, lower HDL cholesterol, older age and arterial hypertension are associated with a greater risk of more severe BLS; to the contrary, coffee drinking is associated with less severe BLS…Coffee use is inversely associated with the degree of bright liver, along with insulin resistance and obesity…”

Their conclusion is similar to numerous other studies:

“A possible opposite, if not antagonistic, role of coffee with regard to overweightness and insulin resistance, similar to that reported in hepatocarcinoma and cirrhosis, is envisaged in the natural history of NAFLD.”

Coffee helps atrial fibrillation with high blood pressure

Nutrition, Metabolism & Cardovascular DiseasesI’ve been seeing a lot of studies that document beneficial effects from drinking coffee, but I never expected this paper that was recently published in the journal Nutrition, Metabolism & Cardiovascular Diseases. Atrial fibrillation is the most common arrhythmia (irregular heart rhythm). The authors set out to investigate…

“the influence of coffee and caffeine consumption on atrial fibrillation (AF) in hypertensive patients…with regard to spontaneous conversion of arrhythmia.”

Spontaneous conversion is when the heart rhythm normalizes on its own. Along the way they made some interesting observations:

“Coffee consumption was higher in normotensive (normal blood pressure) patients. High coffee consumers were more frequent in normotensive patients compared with hypertensive patients. On the other hand, the intake of caffeine was similar in hypertensive and normotensive patients, owing to a higher intake in hypertensive patients from sources other than coffee. Within normotensive patients, we report that non-habitual and low coffee consumers showed the highest probability of spontaneous conversion, whereas, within hypertensive patients, moderate but not high coffee consumers had the lowest probability of spontaneous conversion.”

Interestingly, their data show that if you have high blood pressure, more coffee is better for normalizing atrial fibrillation. Their conclusion:

Coffee and caffeine consumption influence spontaneous conversion of atrial fibrillation. Normotensive non-habitual coffee consumers are more likely to convert arrhythmia within 48h from the onset of symptoms. Hypertensive patients showed a U-shaped relationship between coffee consumption and spontaneous conversion of AF, moderate coffee consumers were less likely to show spontaneous conversion of arrhythmia.”

Two new studies again show benefits of coffee

American Journal of Clinical NutritionCoffee is in the science news again, with two interesting papers that document its benefits. Both were recently published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. The first paper adds more evidence that drinking coffee reduces the risk of type 2 diabetes. The study involved 69,532 French women who were observed over an 11 year period. The authors report an “inverse association [diabetes]…for both regular and decaffeinated coffee and for filtered and black coffee, with no effect of sweetening. Total caffeine intake was also associated with a statistically significantly lower risk of diabetes. Neither tea nor chicory consumption was associated with diabetes risk.” Interestingly, the authors also noted that the observed benefit was particularly pronounced with coffee consumed at lunch. Their conclusion: “Our data support an inverse association between coffee consumption and diabetes and suggest that the time of drinking coffee plays a distinct role in glucose metabolism.”

Considering the importance of inflammation in chronic disease, the second paper is especially interesting in that it documents reductions in subclinical inflammation and oxidative stress as mechanisms by which coffee lowers the risk of type 2 diabetes. Noting that “Coffee consumption is associated with a decreased risk of type 2 diabetes,” the authors state that their “aim was to investigate the effects of daily coffee consumption on biomarkers of coffee intake, subclinical inflammation, oxidative stress, glucose, and lipid metabolism.” They observed a number of interesting effects, including beneficial lowering of the LDL/HDL ratio and IL-18, and an increase in adiponectin. Meanwhile, no adverse changes were seen on the oral glucose tolerance test. They conclude: “Coffee consumption appears to have beneficial effects on subclinical inflammation and HDL cholesterol, whereas no [adverse] changes in glucose metabolism were found in our study.”

Coffee can protect against carbon tetrachloride-induced liver damage

Clinical NutritionCarbon tetrachloride, formerly used as a dry cleaning solvent among other things, is extremely toxic to the liver. It is still used in scientific studies to evaluate the ability of an agent to protect to liver from toxic damage. This study published in the journal Clinical Nutrition investigated “the effects of a coffee preparation [Nescafe®!] on liver fibrosis induced by carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) and explored the possible mechanisms.” The authors observed that “Upon pathological examination, a coffee preparation treatment significantly reduced liver damage and symptoms of liver fibrosis.” The go on to conclude that “The coffee preparation may therefore be a potential functional food for preventing liver fibrosis.”

Coffee and tea can reduce type 2 diabetes: more evidence

Archives of Internal MedicineYet more research, this time a meta-analysis published in Archives of Internal Medicine that accepted data from 18 studies with information on 457,922 patients. They found that “every additional cup of coffee consumed in a day was associated with a 7% reduction in the excess risk of diabetes…” They go on to conclude: “Similar significant and inverse associations were observed with decaffeinated coffee and tea and risk of incident diabetes. High intakes of coffee, decaffeinated coffee, and tea are associated with reduced risk of diabetes.” HOWEVER: those individuals who have a common Th2-type autoimmune disorder or severe sympathetic nervous system hyperarousal can be made worse from these beverages.

Coffee and tea reduce risk of type 2 diabetes

DiabetologiaThis paper published in the journal Diabetologia may contradict some assumptions. The investigators set out to “examine the association of consumption of coffee and tea, separately and in total, with risk of type 2 diabetes and which factors mediate these relations.” Their findings may be a surprise to some: “Total daily consumption of at least three cups of coffee and/or tea reduced the risk of type 2 diabetes by approximately 42%.” They go on to conclude: “Drinking coffee or tea is associated with a lowered risk of type 2 diabetes, which cannot be explained by magnesium, potassium, caffeine or blood pressure effects. Total consumption of at least three cups of coffee or tea per day may lower the risk of type 2 diabetes.” How can this be? There are compounds in both beverages that have anti-inflammatory and other beneficial effects. As you know, chronic inflammation plays an important role in type 2 diabetes. HOWEVER: bear in mind that caffeine can aggravate Th2-type autoimmune conditions, and it may be poorly tolerated by those with sympathetic nervous system hyperarousal.