homehome Home chatchat Notifications


How much coffee is too much? A new study shows 3 cups is maximum

The apparently evergrowing consumption of coffee and caffeinated products continues to worry scientists, and until now, a maximum safety level had not been established. A common story When Matthew Penbross woke on a morning in August 2007, he wanted to be prepared. A natural desire, considering he was competing in the motocross races near Port […]

Mihai Andrei
February 7, 2013 @ 12:54 pm

share Share

The apparently evergrowing consumption of coffee and caffeinated products continues to worry scientists, and until now, a maximum safety level had not been established.

A common story

coffee When Matthew Penbross woke on a morning in August 2007, he wanted to be prepared. A natural desire, considering he was competing in the motocross races near Port Macquarie, Australia; to pump up and improve his reactions, he drank a few Red Bull’s, just as he usually did.

After the first race however, he wasn’t feeling so well. He started feeling sharp chest pains, but despite these, he went on to actually win a race that day; 20 minutes after that, his heart stopped. He had no history of drug consumption or family history of heart disease – but he did drink a few energy drinks almost each day.

The number of stories like this has increased greatly in the past year – as have the sales, and the concern level, sometimes with coffee instead of the energy drink.

“People often don’t understand the potential risk of these beverages,” says Bruce A. Goldberger, director of forensic toxicology at the University of Florida’s pathology labs. Caffeine is a stimulant and, when consumed at high enough levels, can have negative effects.

How much is too much

If you take the word of coffee and energy drink producers, their products are perfectly safe. Monster energy has always been a firm supporter of this idea:

“Neither the science nor the facts support the allegations that have been made. Monster reiterates that its products are and have always been safe.”

But this is pretty much just not true.

“People often don’t understand the potential risk of these beverages,” says Bruce A. Goldberger, director of forensic toxicology at the University of Florida’s pathology labs.

Caffeine safety levels are quite hard to prove. Although scientists have established the toxic dose to be somewhere around 10 g, they say that the value can fluctuate depending on how a person processes the stimulant. Caffeine is filtered and eliminated through the body at different rates depending on each one’s metabolic system. Furthermore, physiological differences, as well as differences in the way people consume caffeine, have tied FDA in knots as it has debated how to regulate the substance.

Small, occasional quantities of coffee generally pose no threat for health and are actually benefic, but once this becomes a habit, and then, an addiction – this all starts to turn around.

“Whereas low-dose caffeine effects are wakefulness, a little bit of arousal, and slight euphoria,” Fredholm says, “high-dose effects are anxiety, irritation, and general mental discomfort—a completely different kettle of fish.”

Those effects are extremely dangerous, especially considering how the mechanism is not exactly well understood.

coffee2

“High-dose caffeine effects are much more complex,” Fredholm explains. “It’s still unknown precisely what the primary mechanism of action is in the brain and elsewhere.”

Coffee producers will argue that the toxic level of caffeine, 10 g, is roughly the equivalent of imbibing 75 cups of brewed coffee – way over what people drink. But the toxic dose is not what you want to look at here, because it’s not the toxicity of the coffee per se that you want to avoid. There is a high variability depending on sex, other drug usage and many other factors, but the previous belief was that levels up to 600 mg of pure caffeine (four to seven cups of coffee) each day should not pose any significant danger.

A more accurate safety level

A team at Health Canada, a government regulatory agency, reviewed more than 200 studies about caffeine’s effects on human health; this was the biggest study of the kind ever conducted. Their conclusions?

They concluded that 400 mg of caffeine per day (or about three 8-oz cups of brewed coffee) is a safe dose for healthy adults to consume, and below this level, the average user should not experience any health problem, and only vague psychological effects.

The team also set a limit of 2.5 mg per kg body weight per day for children. For an average 10-year-old in the U.S., that’s about 75 mg of caffeine, or two 12-oz cans of Coca-Cola.

Source

share Share

A Pig Kidney Transplant Saved This Man's Life — And Now the FDA Is Betting It Could Save Thousands More

A New Hampshire man no longer needs dialysis thanks to a gene-edited pig kidney.

The Earliest Titanium Dental Implants From the 1980s Are Still Working Nearly 40 Years Later

Longest implant study shows titanium roots still going strong decades later.

Mind Over Mirror: How Cosmetic Enhancements Can Boost Mental Health

Beyond aesthetics, cosmetic surgery can help patients rebuild self-esteem, reduce emotional distress, and improve overall quality of life.

Scientists Hacked the Glue Gun Design to Print Bone Scaffolds Directly into Broken Legs (And It Works)

Researchers designed a printer to extrude special bone grafts directly into fractures during surgery.

The Crystal Behind Next Gen Solar Panels May Transform Cancer and Heart Disease Scans

Tiny pixels can save millions of lives and make nuclear medicine scans affordable for both hospitals and patients.

A small, portable test could revolutionize how we diagnose Alzheimer's

A passive EEG scan could spot memory loss before symptoms begin to show.

Researchers Discovered How to Trap Cancer Cells by "Reprogramming" Their Environment

Scientists find a way to stop glioblastoma cells by stiffening a key brain molecule

2.2 Million Fat-Removal Surgeries a Year: What's Behind the Body Contouring Boom

From liposuction to cryolipolysis, fat-removal is now one of the most common cosmetic choices worldwide.

Labiaplasty Is the Fastest-Growing Cosmetic Surgery Worldwide — And It’s Not Just About Looks

Once a taboo subject, vaginal rejuvenation is now part of a broader conversation about women’s intimate wellness.

Ultra-Processed Foods Made Healthy Young Men Gain Fat and Lose Sperm Quality in Just Three Weeks

Processed foods harmed hormones and fertility markers even with identical calories.