Coffee drinkers may be less likely to be hospitalized for
heart rhythm disturbances, according to a new study by the Kaiser Permanente
Division of Research in Oakland, Calif. The researchers, who note the findings
may be surprising because patients frequently report palpitations after
drinking coffee, are presenting the study.
While it has been established that very large doses of
caffeine, the most active ingredient in coffee, can produce rhythm
disturbances, there has been limited epidemiologic research about the caffeine
doses people take. Previous data from a population study in Denmark compared
heavy to light coffee drinkers with respect to risk of atrial fibrillation, the
most common major rhythm disturbance, and found no statistically significant
difference. This research presentation is believed to be the first large, multiethnic
population study to look at all major types of heart rhythm disturbance, the
researchers said.
The researchers followed 130,054 men and women and found
that those who reported drinking four or more cups of coffee each day had an 18
percent lower risk of hospitalization for heart rhythm disturbances. Those who
reported drinking one to three cups each day had a 7 percent reduction in risk,
according to Arthur Klatsky, MD, the study's lead investigator and a senior
consultant in cardiology at Kaiser Permanente Division of Research in Oakland,
Calif.
"Coffee drinking is related to lower risk of
hospitalization for rhythm problems, but the association does not prove cause
and effect, or that coffee has a protective effect," Klasky said. Other
explanations for the association might include other traits of coffee drinkers
such as exercise or dietary habits. Additionally, some people with heart rhythm
problems often are not hospitalized.
"However, these data might be reassuring to people who
drink moderate amounts of coffee that their habit is not likely to cause a
major rhythm disturbance," Klatsky said. While this report is not
sufficient evidence to say that people should drink coffee to prevent rhythm
problems, it supports the idea that people who are at risk for rhythm problems,
or who have rhythm problems, do not necessarily need to abstain from coffee,
emphasized Klatsky.
The long-term observational study involved 130,054 men and
women, 18 to 90 years old, with the majority less than 50 years old. About 2
percent (3,317) were hospitalized for rhythm disturbances; 50 percent of those
were for atrial fibrillation, the most common heart rhythm problem. The 18
percent reduction in risk was consistent among men and women, different ethnic
groups, smokers and nonsmokers. It also was similar for various rhythm problems
such as paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, atrial flutter, and atrial
fibrillation.
Fourteen percent of the people in the study drank less than
one cup of coffee a day; 42 percent drank one to three cups of coffee a day;
and 17 percent reported drinking four cups or more each day. Only 27 percent of
the people in the study were not coffee drinkers.
While emphasizing that these observational data do not
establish causality and a protective mechanism is unclear, researchers
speculate that moderate doses of caffeine may affect rhythm disturbances by
antagonism of adenosine, a nucleoside compound widely distributed in the body.
In the heart adenosine has several effects on conduction of electrical
impulses, muscle cell energetics, and heart muscle cell recovery that might
predispose to rhythm problems. Caffeine antagonizes adenosine effects by
blocking its chemical sites of action.
The researchers examined hospitalization data by elapsed
time after the initial examination. For hospitalization within 10 years, the
reduction in hospitalizations for people who consumed four cups of coffee or
more each day reached 28 percent.
The researchers also studied persons in the group with or
without symptoms or history of heart and respiratory disease. For both groups,
consuming four cups of coffee daily appeared to be associated with fewer
hospitalizations for rhythm disturbances.
Source: Kaiser Permanente
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