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Type-2 diabetics who are coffee drinkers
may find it tougher to control their blood sugar, a new study released
Wednesday said.(File Photo) Photo
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BEIJING,
Jan. 31 (Xinhuanet) -- Type-2 diabetics who are coffee drinkers may find it
tougher to control their blood sugar, a new study released Wednesday said.
Researchers at Duke University Medical Center in
Durham studied the effects of caffeine in 10 patients with Type-2 diabetes by
implanting small glucose detection devices under their abdominal skin to track
the rise and fall of patients' blood sugar levels.
The participants were given four tablets containing
caffeine equivalent to four cups of coffee and identical placebo pills on
various days. The study found their daily blood sugar levels went up by 8
percent when they took tablets containing caffeine. It rose even higher, up to
26 percent after they had dinner.
"Caffeine appears to disrupt glucose metabolism in a
way that could be harmful to people with Type-2 diabetes," said James Lane who
led the study.
"This suggests that people with diabetes might want
to avoid coffee and other caffeinated beverages," Lane said.
Caffeine is found in coffee, tea and many soft
drinks. However, this finding is somewhat confusing, as previous study indicated
that people who drank coffee had a reduced risk of Type-2 diabetes, and those
who drank the most coffee had the lowest risk.
U.S. researchers reported last Monday that too much
caffeine during pregnancy raises the risk for miscarriage. And another study
showed that caffeine may lower a woman's chances of developing ovarian
cancer.
(Agencies)