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Cody Mooneyhan
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A new study published online in The FASEB Journal shows that
the equivalent of one dose of caffeine (just two cups of coffee)
ingested during pregnancy may be enough to affect fetal heart
development and then reduce heart function over the entire lifespan of
the child. In addition, the researchers also found that this relatively
minimal amount of exposure may lead to higher body fat among males,
when compared to those who were not exposed to caffeine. Although the
study was in mice, the biological cause and effect described in the
research paper is plausible in humans.
According to Scott
Rivkees, Yale's Associate Chair of Pediatric Research and a senior
researcher on the study, "Our studies raise potential concerns about
caffeine exposure during very early pregnancy, but further studies are
necessary to evaluate caffeine's safety during pregnancy."
To
reach their conclusion researchers studied four groups of pregnant mice
under two sets of conditions for 48 hours. The first two groups were
studied in "room air," with one group having been injected with
caffeine and another injected with saline solution. The second two
groups were studied under conditions where ambient oxygen levels were
halved, with one group receiving caffeine and the other receiving
saline solution. They found that under both circumstances, mice given
caffeine produced embryos with a thinner layer of tissue separating
some of the heart's chambers than the group that was not given
caffeine.
The researchers then examined the mice born from
these groups to determine what long-term effects, if any, caffeine had
on the offspring. They found that all of the adult males exposed to
caffeine as fetuses had an increase in body fat of about 20 percent,
and decreased cardiac function of 35-38 percent when compared to mice
not exposed to caffeine.
"Caffeine is everywhere: in what
we drink, in what we eat, in pills that we use to relieve pain, and
even in candy," said Gerald Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of The FASEB Journal.
"This report shows that despite popular notions of safety, there's one
place it probably shouldn't be: in the diet of an expectant mother."
Source: Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
Original article: Christopher C. Wendler, Melissa Busovsky-McNeal, Satish Ghatpande,
April Kalinowski, Kerry S. Russell, and Scott A. Rivkees. Embryonic
caffeine exposure induces adverse effects in adulthood. FASEB J. first
published on December 16, 2008 as doi:10.1096/fj.08-124941.
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