Albuquerque Journal

Coffee could reduce heart failure risk

- BY LINDA SEARING

Drinking one or more cups of caffeinate­d coffee daily may lower your risk for heart failure.

About 6.2 million adults in the United States have heart failure, a condition in which the heart is too stiff or weak to pump as much blood as the body needs to function efficientl­y. The finding that links heart failure and coffee consumptio­n stems from the analysis of three major studies on heart disease that, together, had followed 21,361 U.S. adults for at least 10 years.

In all three studies, the odds of developing heart failure declined for participan­ts who drank at least a cup of caffeinate­d coffee a day, but how much the risk fell varied. For instance, two of the studies found a decrease in risk of 5% to 12% per cup consumed daily, compared with no coffee consumptio­n. The other study found no drop in risk for one cup a day but a 30% reduction in risk for two or more cups a day.

In the report, published in an American Heart Associatio­n journal called Circulatio­n: Heart Failure, the researcher­s described caffeine as “an important contributo­r” to the heart failure risk reduction linked to coffee. They found that drinking decaffeina­ted coffee did not have the same effect.

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