Newswise,
January 27, 2016 — Contrary to current clinical belief, regular caffeine
consumption does not lead to extra heartbeats, which, while common, can lead in
rare cases to heart- or stroke-related morbidity and mortality, according to UC
San Francisco researchers.
The
study, which measured the chronic consumption of caffeinated products over a
12-month period, rather than acute consumption, appears in the January 2016
issue of the Journal of the American Heart Association. It is the
largest to date to have evaluated dietary patterns in relation to extra heartbeats.
“Clinical
recommendations advising against the regular consumption of caffeinated
products to prevent disturbances of the heart’s cardiac rhythm should be
reconsidered, as we may unnecessarily be discouraging consumption of items like
chocolate, coffee and tea that might actually have cardiovascular benefits,”
said senior author Gregory Marcus, MD, MAS, a UCSF Health cardiologist and
director of clinical research in the UCSF Division of Cardiology.
“Given our recent work demonstrating that
extra heartbeats can be dangerous, this finding is especially relevant.”
Excessive
premature atrial contractions (PACs) have been shown to result in atrial
fibrillation, stroke and death, while excessive premature ventricular
contractions (PVCs) have been shown to result in increased heart failure,
coronary artery disease and death.
Both
abnormalities have been tied to caffeine consumption through studies and
trials, but these studies were performed several decades ago and did not use
PACs and PVCs as a primary outcome.
Nonetheless,
the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines on the
management of PVCs state that if a patient’s history is consistent with
premature extra beats, potential exacerbating factors such as caffeine, alcohol
and nicotine should be eliminated. Other online medical resources for
clinicians offer similar recommendations.
Recent
growing evidence indicates the potential cardiovascular benefits of several
common caffeinated products such as coffee, chocolate and tea. The result is
clinician uncertainty in counseling patients on consumption of these products,
with patients possibly reducing their intake to avoid presumed cardiac issues.
In
their study, Marcus and his colleagues analyzed 1,388 randomly selected
participants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Cardiovascular Health Study database of nearly 6,000 patients, excluding those
with persistent extra heartbeats.
They
were given a baseline food frequency assessment and 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiography
monitoring. Frequencies of habitual coffee, tea and chocolate consumption were
determined through a survey.
Of
the total participants, 840 (61 percent) consumed more than one caffeinated
product daily.
The
researchers found no differences in the number of PACs or PVCs per hour across
levels of coffee, tea and chocolate consumption. More frequent consumption of
these products was not associated with extra heartbeats.
“This
was the first community-based sample to look at the impact of caffeine on extra
heartbeats, as previous studies looked at people with known arrhythmias,” said
lead author Shalini Dixit, BA, a fourth-year medical student at UCSF.
“Whether
acute consumption of these caffeinated products affects extra heartbeats
requires further study.”
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