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Genes determine coffee-related heart attack risk

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  • Genes determine coffee-related heart attack risk

    http://today.reuters.com/news/newsar..._US-COFFEE.xml

    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A genetic mutation that slows the rate that the body metabolizes caffeine increases individuals' risk of having a heart attack if they drink much coffee, investigators report in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

    Caffeine is metabolized primarily in the liver by the cytochrome P450 1A2 (CYP1A2) enzyme, Dr. Ahmed El-Sohemy and colleagues note. They explain that mutation in the gene that codes for this enzyme alters the rate of caffeine metabolism. This may explain why studies looking at the association between coffee consumption and heart attack risk have been inconclusive.

    To test the effect of the CYP1A2 mutations on heart attack risk, El-Sohemy, from the University of Toronto, and his team mapped out the genes that result in slow metabolism and those that result in rapid metabolism for 2,014 patients who had a first nonfatal heart attack and for 2,014 healthy controls. The study was conducted between 1994 and 2004 in Costa Rica.

    The team's results showed that only carriers of the gene mutation for slow caffeine metabolism were at increased risk of heart attack associated with drinking coffee.

    For these patients, the increased risk was 64 percent for four or more cups per day over the previous year compared with patients who drank less than one cup per day. The corresponding risk was less than 1 percent for subjects who had two copies of the rapid metabolizing gene.

    These relationships were similar in nonsmokers and smokers.

    The gene-coffee interaction was more pronounced among the younger subjects. For individuals younger than 50 years, the risk of heart attack associated with the slow-metabolizing gene was increased by four-fold for those who drank four or more cups per day compared with those who drank less than one cup a day. For subjects with two copies of the rapid metabolizing gene, the corresponding risk was less than 1 percent.

    SOURCE: Journal of the American Medical Association, March 8, 2006.

  • #2
    I would like to see more of this study done on people who exercise consistantly. I have to be careful not to take caffiene in to late so it dosn't effect my sleep. I assume this means I process it slowly.

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    • #3
      Um...am I the only one who thinks four or more cups of coffee a day is alot? I drink it in the mornings, but usually only about a cup and a half.

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      • #4
        Is that the only caffiene you have? A cup of coffee has about 80mg of caffiene in it. Red Bull has 90mg, alot of the energy pills have 100-250mg.

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        • #5
          Ya, I would say 4 cups is alot. I have about a cup and half only also.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by babyblues
            Um...am I the only one who thinks four or more cups of coffee a day is alot? I drink it in the mornings, but usually only about a cup and a half.
            Are we talking a coffee cup full or what the coffee pot considers a cup - seems to me that 2 cups on the pot equals one cup in a mug...

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            • #7
              Originally posted by fog_hat1981
              Are we talking a coffee cup full or what the coffee pot considers a cup - seems to me that 2 cups on the pot equals one cup in a mug...
              I don't know...I would assume an actual cup by volume...some coffee cups hold 2 cups of liquid, some hold less...

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