Marlborough Express

Coffee could keep your heartbeat going strong

- OLIVER MOODY The Times

Drinking up to four cups of coffee a day is likely to curb the risk of abnormal heart rhythms, researcher­s have found.

In some studies caffeine, which is abundant in coffee, tea, chocolate and energy drinks, has been linked to changes in the ‘‘pacemaker’’ cells in the heart’s atrium. For this reason patients with an irregular heartbeat are sometimes advised to avoid it.

Yet a modest caffeine intake is probably mildly protective, according to a review of evidence by cardiologi­sts in Australia.

While there are signs that caffeine may trigger a rapid and uneven heartbeat known as atrial fibrillati­on in a minority of people, it seems to have the opposite effect on most of us. In 2011 a study that followed 130,000 people for 17 years found that the 25 per cent who drank the most coffee were 40 per cent less likely to be hospitalis­ed with arrhythmia­s than the 25 per cent who drank the least.

Another paper, published in 2014 and involving 228,000 participan­ts, concluded that for every extra 300mg of caffeine a day – equivalent to three shots of espresso – the risk of atrial fibrillati­on fell by 6 per cent.

Peter Kistler, head of electrophy­siology research at Alfred Hospital in Melbourne, and the senior author of the review, said that in the long run caffeine might help to limit biological stress and mitigate the damage to tissue from highly reactive oxygen molecules.

‘‘Caffeinate­d beverages such as coffee and tea may have long term anti-arrhythmic properties mediated by antioxidan­t effects and antagonism of adenosine.

‘‘In numerous population-based studies, patients who regularly consume coffee and tea at moderate levels have a lower lifetime risk of developing heart rhythm problems and possibly improved survival,’’ he said.

The paper by Kistler and his colleagues is a summary of research rather than new evidence in its own right.

It cites studies showing that high doses of caffeine flood heart cells with calcium and boost the levels of adrenaline in the brain and bloodstrea­m.

In one experiment, however, rats were given 15mg of caffeine for every kilogram of body weight and all developed a form of heart arrhythmia known as ventricula­r fibrillati­on. To get an equivalent dose, though, humans would have to drink at least 30 cans of Cocacola or ten shots of espresso in a single sitting.

Other researcher­s have tried to get a more accurate picture of the risks involved by giving either caffeine pills or a placebo to people with a history of irregular heartbeat. Daily doses as high as 500mg, equivalent to approximat­ely six cups of coffee, did not led to any greater danger of arrhythmia.

Several large-scale studies have also shown that regular tea or coffee drinkers are less likely to die from heart problems and may also face a lower risk of stroke, heart failure and coronary heart disease.

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