Friday, May 06, 2011
Caffeine in coffee: "healthy antioxidant"
Scientists are reporting an in-depth analysis of how the caffeine in coffee, tea, and other foods seems to protect against conditions such as Alzheimer's disease and heart disease on the most fundamental levels. The report, which describes the chemistry behind caffeine's antioxidant effects, appears in ACS' The Journal of Physical Chemistry B. The researchers describe evidence suggesting that coffee is one of the richest sources of healthful antioxidants in the average person's diet. Some of the newest research points to caffeine (also present in tea, cocoa, and other foods) as the source of powerful antioxidant effects that may help protect people from Alzheimer's and other diseases. However, scientists know little about exactly how caffeine works in scavenging the so-called free radicals that have damaging effects in the body. The researchers presented detailed theoretical calculations on caffeine's interactions with free radicals, showing excellent consistency with the results that other scientists, bolstering the likelihood that caffeine is, indeed, a source of healthful antioxidant activity in coffee.
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