What's new

Tea or coffee? The answer might be genetic

ghazi52

PDF THINK TANK: ANALYST
Joined
Mar 21, 2007
Messages
103,113
Reaction score
106
Country
Pakistan
Location
United States
Tea or coffee? The answer might be genetic
By AFP


1848673-tea-1542376993-744-640x480.jpg


The study found people with greater genetic sensitivity to bitter tastes typically opted for coffee over tea. PHOTO AFP

PARIS: In new research studying how genetic factors determine taste, scientists now believe they know why some humans prefer coffee while others opt for tea.

A paper published this week in the journal Nature Scientific Reports found that people who are genetically predisposed to like more bitter tastes typically choose coffee due to its higher content of tart caffeine.

But, importantly for tea drinkers everywhere, that doesn’t make them right.

As humans evolved we developed the capacity to detect bitterness as a natural warning system to protect the body from harmful substances.
Evolutionarily speaking, we should want to spit that Americano straight down the sink.

But participants in the trial who were more genetically sensitive to the bitter taste of caffeine were more likely to prefer coffee to tea, and more likely to drink more of it.

“You’d expect that people who are particularly sensitive to the bitter taste of caffeine would drink less coffee,” said Marilyn Cornelis, assistant professor of preventative medicine at the Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine.

“The opposite results of our study suggest coffee consumers acquire a taste or an ability to detect caffeine due to the learned positive reinforcement elicited by caffeine.”

So individuals genetically pre-programmed to like coffee’s bitterness learn to associate “good things with it,” said Cornelis.

In the study on more than 400,000 men and women in the United Kingdom, researchers also found that people sensitive to the bitter flavours of quinine and a taste related to vegetable compounds were more likely to eschew coffee in favour of its sweeter counterpart, tea.

Liang-Dar Hwang from the University of Queensland Diamantina Institute, who co-wrote the study, told AFP that the fact that some people prefer coffee showed how everyday experiences can override genetic tendencies when it comes to taste.

“Bitter taste perception is shaped by not only genetics but also environmental factors,” he said.

“Even though humans naturally dislike bitterness, we can learn to like or enjoy bitter-tasting food after being exposed to environmental factors.”

Although coffee-lovers are essentially defying evolution, there is another possible benefit to liking your latte.

Hwang said coffee drinkers were genetically less sensitive to bitterness than tea drinkers, making them “less likely to hate other bitter-tasting foods” such as green vegetables.
 
. .
Three cups of tea or coffee every day good for healthy heart:


1688067-pphotcoffeerfistockx-1523983605-649-640x480.jpg


The research analyzed multiple population-based studies involving 228,465 participants to find the frequency of atrial fibrillation decreased by 6 per cent in regular coffee drinkers, while a further analysis of 115,993 patients showed a risk reduction of 13 per cent.

SYDNEY: Drinking up to three cups of tea or coffee per day can protect people from developing irregular heart beats or arrhythmia, a new study revealed on Tuesday.

Coffee is one of the most popular drinks in the world and the most common form of cognitive enhancement.

However, more than 80 per cent of clinicians in the United States recommend patients with palpitations or arrhythmia abstain or reduce caffeine.

But the new study which involved researchers in the University of Melbourne’s Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute along with partners in the United States consistently demonstrated a reduction in atrial fibrillation (irregular heart beats) with increasing levels of caffeine ingestion.

The research analyzed multiple population-based studies involving 228,465 participants to find the frequency of atrial fibrillation decreased by 6 per cent in regular coffee drinkers, while a further analysis of 115,993 patients showed a risk reduction of 13 per cent.

“There is a public perception, often based on anecdotal experience, that caffeine is a common acute trigger for heart rhythm problems,” lead author Peter Kistler from the Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute said.

“Our extensive review of the medical literature suggests this is not the case.”

“Caffeinated beverages such as coffee and tea may have long term anti-arrhythmic properties mediated by antioxidant effects and antagonism of adenosine,” Kistler concluded.

“In numerous population-based studies, patients who regularly consume coffee and tea at moderate levels have a lower lifetime risk of developing heart rhythm problems and possibly improved survival.”

However, due to significantly higher concentrations of caffeine, researchers advised that energy drinks should be avoided for people with pre-existing structural heart disease.
 
. . . . . .

Latest posts

Military Forum Latest Posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom