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Study: Caffeine interferes with diabetes control
2004-07-26
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - Caffeine could interfere with the
body's ability to handle blood sugar, thus
worsening type 2 diabetes, U.S. researchers
said on Monday.
The
team at Duke University Medical Center in
North Carolina found a strong correlation
between caffeine intake at mealtime and
increased glucose and insulin levels among
people with type 2 diabetes.
The findings are significant enough that the
researchers recommend people with diabetes
consider reducing or eliminating caffeine from
their diets.
"In a healthy person, glucose is metabolized
within an hour or so after eating. Diabetics,
however, do not metabolize glucose as
efficiently," said James Lane, a psychiatry
professor who led the study. "It appears that
diabetics who consume caffeine are likely
having a harder time regulating their insulin
and glucose levels than those who don't take
caffeine."
Writing in the journal Diabetes Care, Lane and
colleagues said they studied 14 habitual
coffee drinkers with type 2 diabetes.
The researchers put the volunteers on a
controlled diet. They took their medications,
had their blood tested and then were given
caffeine capsules. More blood was taken then
and after giving the volunteers a liquid meal
supplement.
Caffeine had little effect on glucose and
insulin levels when the volunteers fasted, the
researchers found. But after the liquid meal,
those who were given caffeine had a 21 percent
increase in their glucose level and insulin
rose 48 percent.
"The goal of clinical treatment for diabetes
is to keep the person's blood glucose down,"
Lane said in a statement. "It seems that
caffeine, by further impairing the metabolism
of meals, is something diabetics ought to
consider avoiding. Some people already watch
their diet and exercise regularly. Avoiding
caffeine might be another way to better manage
their disease. In fact, it's possible that
staying away from caffeine could provide
bigger benefits altogether."
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