Share

Energy drinks bad for heart

People with high blood pressure or heart disease should not consume energy drinks, advise doctors from Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit.

In a study, Dr James S. Kalus and colleagues found that healthy adults who drank two cans of a popular energy drink experienced an increase in blood pressure and heart rate.

The increases in blood pressure and heart rate were insignificant for healthy adults, but could prove a problem for people with a heart-related condition, the researchers warn.

Energy drinks, marketed to enhance brain function and stamina, usually contain caffeine, taurine, sugars, vitamins, and other nutritional supplements, the investigators point out. The potential effects of energy drinks on blood pressure and the heart have not been well studied.

How the study was done
To look into this, the researchers studied 15 healthy volunteers, 20 to 39 years old, who abstained from other forms of caffeine for two days prior to and throughout the study.

On the first day after baseline blood pressure and heart rate measurements were taken, the adults consumed two cans of an energy drink. The researchers then measured the participants' blood pressure and heart rate again at different time points.

Tests showed that the subjects' average heart rate increased 7.8% the first day and 11% the seventh day. Blood pressure increased at least 7% the first and seventh days.

"Increases in blood pressure and heart rate of the magnitude observed in our study could be significant in persons with known cardiovascular disease," Kalus and his associates maintain. Young individuals with undiagnosed, premature cardiovascular disease could also be at risk.

The researchers say consumption of energy drinks - which should not be confused with sports drinks, which aim to replenish carbohydrates and electrolytes that a body needs - "could, theoretically, be a frequently overlooked cause of altered medication effectiveness or even hospital admissions or emergency department visits". – (Reuters Health, April 2009)

Read more:
Energy drinks up BP
Coffee may cause hallucinations

We live in a world where facts and fiction get blurred
In times of uncertainty you need journalism you can trust. For 14 free days, you can have access to a world of in-depth analyses, investigative journalism, top opinions and a range of features. Journalism strengthens democracy. Invest in the future today. Thereafter you will be billed R75 per month. You can cancel anytime and if you cancel within 14 days you won't be billed. 
Subscribe to News24
heading
description
username
Show Comments ()
Editorial feedback and complaints

Contact the public editor with feedback for our journalists, complaints, queries or suggestions about articles on News24.

LEARN MORE