Coffee is Safe for Your Heart
Coffee lovers, rejoice. There's
more evidence that your morning mug won't harm your heart, according to a new
study from Sweden.
In the study, researchers found
that drinking coffee was not associated with an increased risk of a condition
called atrial fibrillation, which is a type of irregular heartbeat, in either
men or women.
"This is largest prospective
study to date on the association between coffee consumption and risk of atrial
fibrillation. We find no evidence that high consumption of coffee increases the
risk of atrial fibrillation," Susanna Larsson, an associate professor of
epidemiology at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and lead author on the
study, said in a statement.
"This is important because
it shows that people who like coffee can safely continue to consume it, at
least in moderation, without the risk of developing this condition,"
Larsson said.
The study comes on the heels of
an earlier study from this year, which suggested that coffee may lower the risk
of heart attacks.
In the new study, the researchers
looked at data from about 42,000 men and nearly 35,000 women who were
participating in two long-running studies, the Cohort of Swedish Men and the
Swedish Mammography Cohort. In 1997, all the participants filled out
questionnaires that asked about their health and diet, including how many cups of
coffee they drank daily or weekly. During the 12-year follow-up period, the
researchers used the Swedish Hospital Discharge Register to determine which
patients developed atrial fibrillation.
The researchers found no
association between coffee consumption and an increased risk of atrial
fibrillation, though they did observe a slight increase in risk when they
limited the analysis to men. However, this increase was not statistically
significant (meaning it could have been due to chance), the researchers wrote.
"Whether men may be more
sensitive to a high coffee or caffeine intake warrants further study," the
researchers wrote in their article, published today (Sept. 22) in the journal
BioMed Central. The researchers also did a meta-analysis, looking at six other
studies on atrial fibrillation and coffee intake, which confirmed their
results.
The researchers cautioned that
although coffee does not appear to increase the risk of atrial fibrillation, it
may increase risk for other types of irregular heartbeats.