Drinking coffee may lower multiple sclerosis risk
People who drink four to six cups of coffee daily may have a lower risk of developing multiple sclerosis (MS), a new research has claimed.
"Caffeine intake has been associated with a reduced risk of Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases, and our study shows that coffee intake may also protect against MS, supporting the idea that the drug may have protective effects for the brain," said study author Ellen Mowry, with Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore and a member of the American Academy of Neurology.
For the study, researchers looked at a Swedish study of 1,629 people with MS and 2,807 healthy people, and a
The studies characterised coffee consumption among persons with MS one and five years before MS symptoms began (as well as 10 years before MS symptoms began in the Swedish study) and compared it to coffee consumption of people who did not have MS at similar time periods.
The study also accounted for other factors such as age, sex, smoking, body mass index, and sun exposure habits.
The Swedish study found that compared to people who drank at least six cups of coffee per day during the year before symptoms appeared, those who did not drink coffee had about a one and a half times increased risk of developing MS.
Drinking large amounts of coffee five or 10 years before symptoms started was similarly protective.
In the
"Caffeine should be studied for its impact on relapses and long-term disability in MS as well," said Mowry. — PTI