- A recent study in Japan found a connection between drinking 2 or more cups of coffee per day and increased mortality rates in people with severe hypertension.
- Severe hypertension is another way of describing high blood pressure.
- The cohort study, which included just over 18,000 men and women, lasted nearly 2 decades.
- While the study authors found that 2 or more cups of coffee raised the risk, they did not find any risks associated with 1 cup of coffee or green tea for people with severe hypertension.
While many people cannot get started in the morning without coffee, a recent study indicates that some may need to practice caution with their coffee consumption.
The researchers found that drinking 2 or more cups of coffee per day may double mortality rates in people with severe hypertension.
They also noted that 1 cup of coffee is 8 ounces — and that anything beyond that may pose health risks in people with severe high blood pressure.
The results of the study were published in the
According to the
Unhealthy lifestyle choices often lead to developing high blood pressure, such as eating foods high in cholesterol and not getting regular exercise. Additionally, health conditions like diabetes can factor into developing hypertension.
A blood pressure reading consists of two numbers: the systolic number (higher number) and the diastolic number (lower number).
The AHA includes
- normal blood pressure (less than 120 over less than 80)
- elevated blood pressure (120–129 over less than 80)
- high blood pressure or hypertension stage 1 (130–139 over 80–89)
- high blood pressure or hypertension stage 2 (140 or higher over 90 or higher)
- hypertensive crisis (higher than 180 over higher than 120)
According to the
When high blood pressure is untreated, it can lead to a heart attack or stroke.
If someone is diagnosed with high blood pressure, they may treat it by making lifestyle changes or taking medications such as angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or calcium channel blockers.
The study authors used information from participants in the Japan Collaborative Cohort Study for Evaluation of Cancer Risk. They analyzed data from 18,609 people (6,574 men and 12,035 women).
The participants were 40 to 79 years old when the cohort study began between 1988 and 1990.
The cohort researchers took the participants’ blood pressure reading at the beginning of the study, as well as other medical background information and followed up with them over 18.9 years.
The coffee study authors were interested in how the participants’ coffee and green tea consumption habits factored into their blood pressure scores and heart-related deaths.
The researchers placed the participants into one of five categories based on their blood pressure readings (the categories vary somewhat from the AHA):
- optimal and normal blood pressure (less than 130 over less than 85)
- high‐normal blood pressure (130–139 over 85–89)
- grade 1 hypertension (140–159 over 90–99)
- grade 2 hypertension (160–179 over 100–109)
- grade 3 hypertension (180 and higher over 110 and higher)
Since many participants did not have grade 2 and 3 hypertension, the researchers combined the data for these groups.
After placing the participants into categories based on their blood pressure readings, the researchers considered their coffee and green tea drinking habits. The participants indicated the frequency and amount of consumption.
For context, an 8-ounce coffee contains 95 to 200 mg of caffeine, making coffee more caffeinated than some energy drinks. Green tea contains approximately
Over the course of the study follow-up, the researchers recorded 842 cardiovascular-related participant deaths.
The results of the study showed that people with grade 2 and 3 hypertension who drank 2 or more cups of coffee per day had twice the cardiovascular-related death mortality rate compared to people in the same category who did not drink coffee.
”These findings may support the assertion that people with severe high blood pressure should avoid drinking excessive coffee,” senior author Dr. Hiroyasu Iso, director of the Institute for Global Health Policy Research in Tokyo, told Medical News Today.
The study findings also showed that drinking 1 cup of coffee did not increase the risk for anyone across any blood pressure categories.
Just 1 cup of coffee can contain nearly 3 times the amount of caffeine as 1 cup of green tea, but the researchers did not detect issues with green tea regardless of the amount consumed.
The study authors believe this is due to the “mechanism underlying the beneficial effects of green tea,” which is the compound
The authors noted that animal studies of green tea shows that epigallocatechin-3-gallate can positively affect
“These beneficial effects of green tea catechins may partially explain why only coffee consumption was associated with an increased risk of mortality in people with severe hypertension despite both green tea and coffee containing caffeine,” the authors wrote.
“This study supports the implication that heavy coffee consumption can increase the risk of cardiovascular disease mortality among people with severe hypertension, while green tea consumption does not increase the risk,” Dr. Jayne Morgan, a cardiologist and clinical director of the Covid Task Force at the Piedmont Healthcare Corporation in Atlanta, GA, told MNT.
Yelena Wheeler, RDN, a clinical dietitian with the Measurement Instrument Database for Social Sciences (MIDSS) in Los Angeles, CA, also spoke with MNT about the study findings:
“The study pointed out that ‘heavy’ coffee consumption was associated with increased risk of cardiovascular mortality with people who were already suffering from severe hypertension. This seems somewhat of an obvious cause and effect; however, not finding any increased risk of CVD mortality amongst those in all categories who consumed green tea was an interesting twist.”
Wheeler added it would be interesting to see further research into the habits of people who consume coffee versus green tea, such as the types of jobs they hold or whether they practice mindfulness and meditation.
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