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Morning-only coffee drinkers demonstrate a 16% lower risk of death from any cause and a 31% lower risk of cardiovascular death—benefits that exceed all-day coffee consumption, regardless of whether it's caffeinated or decaffeinated.
cancer
coffee
caffeine
cardiovascular
academic.oup.com
submitted 1 day ago by
Teresa
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A daily cup of coffee could reduce your risk of heart disease and diabetes by half.
sleep
heart disease
diabetes
biomarkers
coffee
green tea
caffeine
stroke
cardiovascular
academic.oup.com
submitted 8 months ago by
Teresa
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Caffeine impairs the brain's adaptive response to sleep restriction, reducing gray matter volume.
brain
sleep
caffeine
www.nature.com
submitted 10 months ago by
Teresa
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Drinking caffeinated coffee reduces the risk of Parkinson's disease by 37 percent.
parkinson's
coffee
caffeine
neurodegeneration
www.neurology.org
submitted 11 months ago by
Teresa
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Exercising, drinking coffee and having sex are triggers that raise rupture risks for brain aneurysm, retrospective study finds. (2011)
exercise
alcohol
stress
sex
caffeine
aneurysm
www.sciencedaily.com
submitted almost 3 years ago by
Andreas92
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Impacts of Caffeine during Pregnancy
pregnancy
coffee
caffeine
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7035149/#:~:text=Current%20studies%20show%20that%20maternal,35–38%2C55%5D
submitted almost 3 years ago by
Teresa
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Caffeine consumption during pregnancy alters neurodevelopment in the fetal brain.
pregnancy
caffeine
medicalxpress.com
submitted about 4 years ago by
rhonda
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Expression of specific inflammasome gene modules stratifies older individuals into two extreme clinical and immunological states (2017)
aging
inflammation
caffeine
blood pressure
www.nature.com
submitted almost 7 years ago by
pmiguel
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Daily tea consumption (green, black or oolong) was associated with a 50% reduced risk of cognitive decline.
brain
alzheimer's
aging
depression
dementia
caffeine
antioxidant
dairy
www.sciencedaily.com
submitted about 8 years ago by
rhonda
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Caffeine was shown to increase the activity of an enzyme (called NMNAT2) that is known to protect against dementia.
brain
aging
dementia
caffeine
vitamin a
www.sciencedaily.com
submitted about 8 years ago by
rhonda
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Caffeine may counter age-related inflammation [by decreasing inflammatory protein IL-1-beta]
aging
inflammation
coffee
caffeine
protein
med.stanford.edu
submitted over 8 years ago by
timar
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For Coffee Drinkers the Buzz May Be in Your Genes
heart disease
coffee
anxiety
caffeine
well.blogs.nytimes.com
submitted almost 9 years ago by
sts
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Coffee not associated with lifestyle diseases
caffeine
www.sciencedaily.com
submitted almost 10 years ago by
carlsonbjj
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Coffee doesn’t give you energy, it just fools your brain into thinking it isn’t tired
brain
caffeine
www.rawstory.com
submitted over 10 years ago by
carlsonbjj
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Caffeine intake is associated with a lower risk of kidney stones.
abstract
caffeine
ajcn.nutrition.org
submitted over 10 years ago by
KickAssBrockSamson
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Drinking 3 cups of coffee a day (caffeine or decaf), was associated with lower levels of abnormal liver enzymes.
diet
caffeine
www.sciencedaily.com
submitted over 10 years ago by
rhonda
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Coffee genome has been sequenced & shows coffee plant makes caffeine using different set of genes than those in tea.
caffeine
www.nature.com
submitted over 10 years ago by
rhonda
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In the diaries of civil war soldiers, “coffee” appears more often than “rifle,” “cannon” or “bullet
caffeine
dairy
mobile.nytimes.com
submitted almost 11 years ago by
rhonda
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