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Coffee’s Superpowers Could Extend To Slowing Ageing

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A Stanford study has found another benefit to the mighty bean.  Where we were once told to not drink coffee, we are now, almost on a daily basis, being told of the extraordinary health benefits linked with the caffeine-rich drink.

The latest potential benefit of coffee comes from a study from Stanford University School of Medicine, and it is one readers of The Retiree are going to love. The results of the study show caffeine can reduce the inflammation linked with many age-related chronic diseases, including cancer, cardiovascular disease and various types of dementia. Essentially, more dramatically, and slightly less accurately, it could slow ageing.

Researchers analysed the blood of 100 young and old people, aged 20-30 or over 60 at the start of the study ten years ago. In the older group, those who had low levels of inflammation tended to drink more caffeinated drinks like coffee.

The team behind the study suggest that this reduced inflammation could be the reason for the established link between caffeine intake and longevity.

“More than 90% of all non-communicable diseases of ageing are associated with chronic inflammation,” said the study’s lead author, biochemist Dr David Furman.

“More than 1,000 papers have provided evidence that chronic inflammation contributes to many cancers, Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, cardiovascular disease, osteoarthritis and even depression.”

“It’s also well-known that caffeine intake is associated with longevity. Many studies have shown this association. We’ve found a possible reason for why this may be so.”

Furthermore, the benefits seem to keep on coming the more caffeine you drink.

“The more caffeine people consumed, the more protected they were against a chronic state of inflammation,” Furman told Time, “There was no boundary, apparently.”

While inflammation is linked with plenty of chronic diseases, the aim is not to completely eliminate it. Inflammation is an important aspect of the immune system and helps fight off infection. The issue is when people get older, the inflammation isn’t regulated as effectively.

Dr Furman and his team aim to investigate the subject further with a study on 1,000 people. Until then, keep drinking coffee.

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Alana Lowes

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