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2010-11-17 12:55:53
by Karin Zeitvogel Karin Zeitvogel Tue Nov 16, 9:08 pm ET
WASHINGTON (AFP) Regularly consuming high-caffeine energy drinks
significantly increases the risk of becoming alcohol-dependent and engaging in
bouts of heavy drinking, a study published Tuesday found.
The study of more than 1,000 students at a US university found that those who
consumed caffeinated energy drinks on a weekly or daily basis drank alcohol
more often and in greater quantities, and were more likely to become alcohol
dependent than students who used energy drinks occasionally or not at all.
High consumers of energy drinks also had greater risk for alcohol-related
problems such as blackouts or missing class because they were hung over, and
were more susceptible to self-injury than non- or light users of energy drinks,
said the study, led by University of Maryland researcher Amelia Arria.
The study, which was released online ahead of publication next year in the
journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, adds to earlier
research that found links between heavy energy drink consumption and substance
abuse and high-risk behavior.
Energy drinks, including Red Bull, Monster and Rockstar, deliver the equivalent
caffeine dose of a cup and a half of brewed coffee but do not have to disclose
their caffeine content on their label, which could lead to consumers of the
drinks taking in more caffeine than they realize.
It comes as debate heated up about the dangers of drinks marketed mainly to
young people, which combine both alcohol and caffeine in the same can, which
five US states and several universities have cracked down on or banned.
Michigan, New York, Oklahoma, Utah and Washington have taken steps to ban
drinks that combine caffeine and alcohol, as have several US universities.
In August, an 18-year old girl went into cardiac arrest and died after drinking
a beverage that contains alcohol, caffeine, the stimulant guarana and taurine,
an amino acid thought to improve athletic performance. The girl had also taken
a slimming pill on the day of her death.
Last month, nine students passed out and were hospitalized after drinking the
same brand of caffeine-alcohol cocktail as the girl who died in August.
US Senator Charles Schumer, who has spearheaded a campaign to have
stimulant-alcohol drinks banned, said Tuesday that the Food and Drug
Administration is poised to rule that caffeine "is an unsafe food additive to
alcoholic beverages," which would effectively ban drinks that combine the two.
Alcohol-caffeine mix drinks deliver a caffeine boost equivalent to two to three
cups of coffee and a dose of alcohol equivalent to three cans of beer, Schumer
said, calling the mix "dangerous and toxic."
Arria and her co-authors on the study noted that youngsters are tending more
and more to mix their own caffeine-alcohol drinks, thinking -- wrongly -- that
the caffeine, which keeps them awake, is counteracting the effects of the
alcohol.
"They're under the misguided notion that they're not impaired when they are
just as impaired as a person with the same blood-alcohol concentration. It's
their subjective perception of drunkenness that is impaired," Arria told AFP.
She welcomed the crackdown by US states and universities on beverages that
blend caffeine and alcohol, but said more had to be done to increase public
awareness of the dangers of do-it-yourself mixing of the two.
"When states and policymakers act to limit the availability of mixed
energy-alcohol drinks, that should send an unequivocal message to consumers and
the industry that mixing on your own is risky behavior," she told AFP.
"We have the ability to regulate products that are premixed but not to regulate
people's behaviour," she said.
Nearly two-thirds of the more than 1,000 students interviewed for the study
used energy drinks at some time in the past year, and 10 percent consumed them
on a weekly or daily basis.
That could lead to a person ingesting much more caffeine than they thought they
were, which could lead to conditions including insomnia, irregular heartbeat,
headaches and muscle tremors.
"The other difference between these energy drinks and coffee is that coffee is
usually served hot, so you drink it more slowly," said Arria.
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Posted: 2010877@488.70
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stranger
Les boissons nergisantes favorisent-elles l'alcoolisme ?
Les boissons nergisantes, cens es aider rester veill et alerte et fr
quemment consomm es par les adolescents et les tudiants, peuvent favoriser l
alcoolisme, selon une tude am ricaine publi e mardi.
L tude, r alis e aupr s de 1.000 tudiants, a montr que ceux qui consommaient
souvent des boissons nergisantes (52 ou plus par an) avaient tendance tre
saouls plus jeunes, boire des quantit s d alcool plus importantes lors d une
soir e et contracter, l ge adulte, une d pendance l alcool.
L agence am ricaine de r gulation des m dicaments (FDA) se penche depuis un an
sur ces boissons comme Red Bull, Monster et Rockstar qui contiennent de la caf
ine haute densit . Elle devrait rendre sa d cision rapidement sur l
opportunit de r glementer leur commercialisation.
La recherche indique que ceux qui ont fr quemment recours aux boissons
nergisantes pr sentent statistiquement un fort risque de devenir alcooliques et
de boire beaucoup , affirme l tude, dont les r sultats seront publi s dans l
dition de f vrier 2011 de la revue Alcoholism: Clinical and experimental
research.
Il devient aussi de plus en plus populaire de m langer de l alcool ces
boissons nergisantes. Ces breuvages tant hautement caf in s, cela peut
conduire d autres probl mes en plus de la privation de sommeil , s inqui tent
les chercheurs de la School of Public Health de l universit du Maryland.
M langer des boissons nergisantes de l alcool peut conduire une ivresse
veill e, dans le sens ou la caf ine masque l tat d bri t sans en fait
diminuer les effets sur le physique et le comportement du buveur , affirment
les chercheurs.
L individu se sent moins ivre qu il ne l est r ellement, ce qui le porte
boire encore davantage et adopter des comportements risque comme conduire
en tat d ivresse , ajoutent-ils.
(Source AFP)