[Reblog] Can Buttered Coffee Give You a Better Body?
From the March 2015 blog item by
Heart-healthy fats are good, but not in coffee
There’s a lot of hype lately about the most recent coffee trend. Take your morning cup-of-joe, add two tablespoons of butter and some oil, and call it Bulletproof Coffee. No doubt it’s an interesting flavor, but it’s the claims of increased energy and weight loss that seem to be giving this morning jolt traction.
It’s not just any butter and coffee. Those supporting this idea say it has to be unsalted, grass-fed butter and medium-chain triglyceride oil (MCT) added to low-toxicity coffee beans. But can a mixture like that really live up to what proponents are saying?
What happens to butter in your body
There’s no real research into whether butter-spiked coffee is good for you, but we do know some things about how butter affects your digestion.
According to existing research, fat in butter contains glycosphingolipids, fatty acids that ward off gastrointestinal tract infections, especially in very young children and older adults.
Its omega-3 and omega-6 fats also slow down your body’s metabolism of caffeine, so you hold on to energy longer and avoid the crash that comes when the stimulant wears off.
More about MCT
MCT, most commonly found in coconut oil, is also good for our bodies and brains. When it comes to our bodies, we don’t store MCT in our adipose tissue, the fat around and inside our muscles, like the other dietary fats we eat.
Most of those fats are long-chain triglycerides, but MCTs are shorter. They travel directly to the liver where they’re processed into powerful energy particles called ketone bodies.
In addition, if your brain loses the ability to break down its primary fuel source, glucose, due to cognitive impairment or some other disorder, it can use ketone bodies as an excellent, alternative source. Researchshows that people with cognitive impairment who ingest MCT experience an almost immediate improvement in mental function.
My verdict
So, do the health benefits of butter and MCT mean you should add them to your morning coffee? To begin with, if you don’t already drink coffee, I don’t recommend you start. If you do, though, I still don’t endorse your adding butter and oil to it, and I have no plans to do it either.
Healthy fats and oils do have a place in our daily diets, but I’m not convinced that enhancing our coffee with them is the best way to incorporate them.
2 ways to help your patients get better sleep
English: A photo of a cup of coffee. Esperanto: Taso de kafo. Français : Photo d’une tasse de caffé Español: Taza de café (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
By JULIA SCHLAM EDELMAN, MD , 5 January 2013 post at KevinMD.com
…
1. Avoid looking at back-lit screens for 60 minutes before bedtime. That means no television, iPad use, laptop use, checking the smartphone, or reading a back-lit e-reader before bed. Reading a book made from trees is ideal, as is listening to music or having a relaxing conversation, if you remember that vanishing social custom.
2. Taper the amount of caffeine you consume. Even if you finish your coffee in the morning, you will benefit. It takes six hours to clear half the amount of caffeine you consume. With super-sized coffee cups, a large cup may contain more than 200 milligrams of caffeine. Here is the math. If you drink three large cups of coffee by 11am, you have consumed 600 milligrams of caffeine. Six hours later, at 5pm, 300mg of caffeine remain in your body. Six hours after that, at 11pm, 150mg remain. At 5am the next morning, 75mg of caffeine remain from the previous morning. This compromises your ability to fall asleep readily, and makes your mind race. It also prevents deep, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. If your patient offers to stop “cold turkey,” don’t let her. A slow taper prevents caffeine-withdrawal headaches.
…
Related articles
- Use Science To Get Better Sleep (And Need Less) (lifehacker.com.au)
- Rest For The Weary: 5 Great Travel-Centric Ways To Celebrate National Sleep Day (gadling.com)
Coffee- some cons
While I am a coffee lover, presently the indulgence is only 2 cups a day.
Came across 2 items recently that have reinforced why I limit my intake.
In my humble opinion, it really is scientifically challenging to say if coffee is good or bad because there are so many chemicals in coffee, each with associated side effects…
The items…
10 Reasons to Quit Your Coffee! (by Mark Hyman, MD at HuffPost Healthy Living, 7/1/12)
(via Amy Croan, MPH who I follow on Twitter. She authors the blog To Your Health..).
Excerpts
While there are many controversies about coffee’s role in the prevention of Parkinson’s disease to breast cancer, I’m mostly interested in the conversation relating to its effect on blood sugar metabolism. If you have read my latest book, The Blood Sugar Solution, then you already know how insulin resistance and inflammation are at the core of modern-day chronic diseases….
Here are 10 reasons why:
- The caffeine in coffee increases catecholamines, your stress hormones. The stress response elicits cortisol and increases insulin. Insulin increases inflammation, and this makes you feel lousy.
- Habituation to caffeine decreases insulin sensitivity, making it difficult for your cells to respond appropriately to blood sugar. High blood sugar levels lead to arterial deterioration and increased risk of mortality related to cardiovascular disease.
- Unfiltered coffee has the highest amount of beneficial antioxidants yet also leaks the most diterpenes into your system. These diterpenes have been linked to higher levels of triglycerides, LDL and VLDL levels.
- The helpful chlorogenic acids that may delay glucose absorption in the intestine have also been shown to increase homocysteine levels — an indicator for increased risk of cardiovascular disease, which tends to be elevated in diabesity.
- The acidity of coffee is associated with digestive discomfort, indigestion, heart burn, GERD and dysbiosis (imbalances in your gut flora).
- Addiction is often an issue with coffee drinkers and makes it really difficult to rely on the body’s natural source of energy. Ask any coffee drinker about how it feels to withdraw from coffee, and you will mistake their story for that of a drug addict’s…
- Associative addictions trend with coffee — who doesn’t immediately think of warm, frothy sweet cream and sugar when they picture coffee? Surely the business of coffee has inspired a culture addicted to the sugary, fatty tastes of what has become more of a meal than a drink! That morning latte is the epitome of food lacking nutrition density yet packing energy!
- 5-HIA, an organic acid and component of the neurotransmitter serotonin (the happy chemical) seen in the urine tends to be elevated in coffee drinkers, which means they may be at risk for lower levels of serotonin synthesis in the brain. Serotonin is necessary for normal sleep, bowel function, mood, and energy levels. It is a vicious cycle, as caffeine can disrupt sleep and promote anxiety and depression. We all know someone who tends to be tired, wired and over-caffeinated!
- Elevated urinary excretion of important minerals such as calcium, magnesium and potassium have been noted in coffee drinkers. An imbalance in your electrolyte status can lead to serious systemic complications.Constituents in coffee can interfere with normal drug metabolism and detoxification in the liver, making it difficult to regulate the normal detoxification process in the liver.
- Another issue to be aware of with coffee intake is how certain medications such as levothyroxine (thyroid) as well as tricyclic antidepressants are poorly absorbed, making symptoms curiously worse for patients.
As long as news keeps cranking coffee benefit stories, we’ll keep commenting on them (HealthNewsReview.org*** 7/2/2012)
Excerpts
CAFFEINE LINKED TO LOWER SKIN CANCER RISK – ABC NEWS
CAFFEINE IN COFFEE MAY HELP LOWER RISK OF SKIN CANCER – Fox News
Addendum on July 4:
None of these stories mentioned anything about:
- this was an observational study
- it showed a statistical association – not cause-and-effect
And the Fox and CNN stories didn’t have any independent perspective – only the researcher/author touting the study’s importance.
But the sun shines on HealthDay today because it included this simple and effective reminder:
“While the study uncovered an association between greater caffeine consumption and reduced risk of basal cell cancer, it did not prove a cause-and-effect relationship.”
As always, we remind journalists and news consumers of our primer: Does The Language Fit The Evidence? – Association Versus Causation
Here are just some of our past blog posts about news coverage of supposed health benefits of coffee:
Coffee clichés and the tired old trend on observational study stories
Another coffee observational study – another round of misplaced emphasis
Story whips up confusion over coffee and breast cancer risk – hurts more than helps
Coffee & prostate cancer: Some news reports got it right. Others….
Coffee & stroke: what the study didn’t prove and what some stories got wrong
Another day, another slew of misleading media messages on observational study
CBS is wrong on coffee “lowering risk” of uterine cancer
Silly, unsupported headlines on coffee-tea & MRSA
Prevention Magazine: we said we’d be watching you and we are!
Wisdom of the crowds: news consumers tired of misinterpreted observational studies
**HealthNewsReview.org provides independent reviews of health stories which are based on high journalism standards of accuracy, completeness and balance. (See their toolkit for tips on how to understand studies, evaluate claims, analyze news coverage, and more)
Related articles
- Caffeinated Coffee May Lead to Vison Loss (medicalnewstoday.com)
- Drinking Coffee: More Good Than Harm? (medicalnewstoday.com)
- Does Caffeine Help You Live Longer? (everydayhealth.com)
- Are there health benefits in consuming coffee? (thehindu.com)
- Grounds for celebration (smh.com.au)
- Coffee gets better and better (toledoblade.com)
- Three daily cups of caffeinated coffee tied to 17% drop in risk for common skin cancer (cbsnews.com)
- Coffee could cut skin cancer risk (thechart.blogs.cnn.com)
- The Potential Cancer-Fighting Benefit Of Coffee (huffingtonpost.com)
- Caffeine Linked To Lower Skin Cancer Risk (science.slashdot.org)
- Caffeine may reduce risk of skin cancer: report (news.yahoo.com)
- The Case for Coffee: All the Latest Research to Defend Your Caffeine Addiction, in One Place (theatlantic.com)
- Bust out the coffee and chocolate – caffeine may help prevent skin cancer (eatocracy.cnn.com)
- Coffee, Tea and Bad Conduct (nlm.nih.gov)
- Coffee drinkers reassured about health risks (cbc.ca)
- FAQ about coffee, longevity, sugar and stupidity. And also vampires. (fox13now.com)
- Lowcountry Blend can enhance your workout! (sunocobeanteam.wordpress.com)
- The Blog Post That Starbucks Doesn’t Want You to Read (onehealthygirl.com)
- HealthWise: Why energy drinks starve your brain (gatestec.wordpress.com)
- Kick the Caffeine Craving (massageenvy.com)
- Coffee pros and cons (therealfoodchannel.com)
- 10 Coffee Myths You Think Are True (gabrielcatalano.com)
Best Time For A Coffee Break? There’s An App For That
From the 16 February 2012 Medical News Today article
Caffeinated drinks such as coffee and soda are the pick-me-ups of choice for many people, but too much caffeine can cause nervousness and sleep problems.
Caffeine Zone software app developed by Penn State researchers, can help people determine when caffeine may give them a mental boost and when it could hurt their sleep patterns. The software takes information on caffeine use and integrates it with information on the effects of caffeine to produce a graph of how the caffeine will affect the users over time. …
…The app is available on iTunes for free with advertisements and for purchase without ads. It only works on Apple devices – the iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad.
Penn State
For information on how to select health apps (with links to select health apps), please visit my Health Apps Web page
Related articles
- Best time for a coffee break? There’s an app for that (eurekalert.org)
- Best time for a coffee break? There’s an app for that (esciencenews.com)
- How to optimize your caffeine intake: there’s an app for that (boingboing.net)
- Time for Coffee? Ask Your Smart Phone (psychcentral.com)
- Optimizing Your Caffeine Intake With an App (science.slashdot.org)