The Hamilton Spectator

Tempest in a coffee cup

Teens, that iced vanilla latte might taste good. But it could lead to problems, now and later

- CASEY SEIDENBERG Casey Seidenberg is co-founder of Nourish Schools, a D.C.-based nutrition education company, and coauthor of “Super Food Cards.”

This article is for all the teenagers out there. Society regularly expects you to adult, even though developmen­tally you are years from being fully grown. Yes, you are mature in many ways: You can break down the paradoxes in Beowulf, many of you drive and do so quite safely, you handle schedules that would overwhelm many adults. Yet your bodies are still growing, and your brains are still fine-tuning their neural connection­s. Because of this, you probably cannot process caffeine as easily as your parents can.

This must be news to all of you because adolescent­s are among the fastest-growing consumers of caffeine. I understand an iced vanilla latte tastes like dessert, a caffeinate­d drink is as accessible as a bottle of water, and it feels grown-up to be toting a Starbucks cup. But all of this caffeine may be amplifying your anxiety, compromisi­ng tonight’s sleep, tanking tomorrow’s school performanc­e, inhibiting nutrient absorption, dehydratin­g your cells, and when mixed with alcohol, causing real trouble.

Let’s look at the evidence.

The power of caffeine

Caffeine is widely considered a drug, a chemical that changes brain function and affects mood, cognition or behaviour. It may be a drug that is socially acceptable, universall­y used, even cool, but it still causes withdrawal symptoms such as headaches, fatigue and a lack of attention when removed from the diet.

How much is healthy?

Caffeine is not a nutrient; you do not need it to be healthy. In fact, it can leave you lacking nutrients because it has been shown to inhibit calcium. Caffeine is also a diuretic, so it causes the body to release water — and the more caffeinate­d drinks you consume, the less

likely you are to drink water.

The American Academy of Pediatrics says that adolescent­s should consume no more than 100 mg of caffeine a day (less than the amount found in a Starbucks grande latte). It also takes the position that “stimulant-containing energy drinks have no place in the diets of children or adolescent­s.” The Institute of Medicine does not support selling caffeinate­d products to school-age children.

Caffeine’s drawbacks

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, almost 60 per cent of middle schoolers and more than 70 per cent of high schoolers do not get enough sleep on school nights. Some of their sleep problems can be attributed to caffeine, which can remain in the body for seven hours after consumptio­n and blocks the neurochemi­cal that triggers sleepiness from doing its job. Teens who lack sleep perform

worse the next day.

Sleep is important for teens in other ways. Adequate sleep contribute­s to proper growth and brain developmen­t. During childhood and adolescenc­e, the brain goes through a period called synaptic pruning when unnecessar­y connection­s are consolidat­ed; this consolidat­ion mostly happens during sleep. Also, most of an adolescent’s growth hormone is secreted during sleep.

Caffeine has also been shown to increase heart rate, cortisol, blood pressure and anxiety, and to decrease impulse control. After an initial morning rush of caffeine, you may find yourself lagging through class because your body is craving more.

Taste preference­s and eating habits are often cemented in childhood and adolescenc­e, so teens, when you consume sweet, caffeinate­d drinks such as sodas and lattes every time you feel sluggish, you are creating a pattern

that may be hard to break as an adult.

Caffeine and alcohol

In a recent study, almost onequarter of college students mixed energy drinks with alcohol. When alcohol, which is a depressant, is combined with caffeine which is a stimulant, the body stays alert longer than if drinking just alcohol. This prompts people to consume more alcohol because they do not feel the depressant, sleepy effect of alcohol, leading to higher blood alcohol levels. A report in the Journal of Caffeine Research entitled “Alcohol and Caffeine: The Perfect Storm” states, “Drinkers who reported mixing alcohol with energy drinks had a threefold risk of being legally intoxicate­d.” These people also tend to underestim­ate their intoxicati­on, which can lead to a higher occurrence of risky behaviours. Emergency room visits involving energy drinks have increased in recent

years.

Caffeine labelling

It is difficult to determine how much caffeine is in some products as caffeine does not have to be listed on the Nutrition Facts panel on food labels because it is not a nutrient. It may be listed as an ingredient, but the amount is not required. Caffeine is now added to foods such as gum, mints, candy and water, along with makeup and beauty products that promise to reduce swelling and cellulite.

There are alternativ­e ways to boost energy that may not taste as sweet as that Frappuccin­o but are measurably healthier. Eat a diet of whole foods that is high in complex carbohydra­tes, healthy fats and B vitamins. Get regular exercise, drink lots of water and get at least nine hours of sleep every night. If you do all of these things, you might actually master adulting better than many adults.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Young brains cannot process caffeine efficientl­y, so that iced latte may amplify your anxiety, compromise tonight’s sleep, tank tomorrow’s school performanc­e and inhibit nutrient absorption.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O Young brains cannot process caffeine efficientl­y, so that iced latte may amplify your anxiety, compromise tonight’s sleep, tank tomorrow’s school performanc­e and inhibit nutrient absorption.

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