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Good news for coffee drinkers: Study finds coffee doesn’t speed up your heart

COFFEE and tea drinkers can, and should, sip worry-free — regular caffeine consumption doesn’t cause heart palpitations, according to a new study.

COFFEE and tea drinkers can, and should, sip worry — free — regular caffeine consumption doesn’t cause heart palpitations, and likely has cardiovascular benefits, according to a new study.

Researchers from the University of California San Francisco looked at 1,388 people who were taking part in a larger heart study, specifically 60 per cent of group who said drinking caffeinated drinks — coffee, tea and chocolate — were part of their daily routine.

The researchers looked for heart irregularities — premature ventricular and atrial contractions — in the participants over a year, but found that there were no differences among the participants, average age 72, regardless of their caffeine intake.

“In general, consuming caffeinated products every day is not associated with having increased … arrhythmia but cannot specify a particular amount per day,” lead researcher Dr. Gregory Marcus wrote in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

Their findings go against the conventional clinical knowledge in the medical world that caffeine causes palpitations, which can lead to more chronic problems including heart failure or arrhythmias.

A cup of coffee is part of many people’s daily routine.
A cup of coffee is part of many people’s daily routine.

In fact, they discovered that “habitual coffee drinkers” actually have less of a chance of developing coronary artery disease.

“Recommendations advising against the regular consumption of caffeinated products to prevent disturbances of the heart’s cardiac rhythm should be reconsidered, as we may unnecessarily be discouraging consumption of items like chocolate, coffee and tea that might actually have cardiovascular benefits,” according to Marcus.

The study didn’t look into the effects of powdered caffeine used in energy drinks, but the Food and Drug Administration in the US has warned against its potentially deadly side effects.

Just one teaspoon of the powder is equivalent to the amount of caffeine in 28 regular cups of coffee.

The study was funded by the UCSF Clinical and Translational Science Institute, The Joseph Drown Foundation, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and the National Institute on Aging.

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Originally published as Good news for coffee drinkers: Study finds coffee doesn’t speed up your heart

Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/lifestyle/food/good-news-for-coffee-drinkers-study-finds-coffee-doesnt-speed-up-your-heart/news-story/03148d489fb011e9a74f1ad8e65f6cba