Seven Cups of Coffee a Day May Lead to Hallucinati
Consuming the caffeine in seven cups of instant - Bloomberg
1/14/2009
Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Consuming the caffeine in seven cups of instant
coffee a day may leave you more likely to see, hear and smell things
that aren’t there, U.K. researchers said.
People who drink at least 330 milligrams of the stimulant a day were
three times as likely to have hallucinations as those who consumed less
than 10 milligrams a day, Durham University researchers found in a
study of 219 college students published today in Personality and
Individual Differences.
The study, the first to link caffeine and hallucinations, explored the
relationship between high caffeine consumption and an increased release
of cortisol, a stress hormone believed to contribute to delusions, lead researcher Simon Jones said. It forms the
first step toward examining nutrition as a factor in the occurrence of hallucinations, he said.
“Given the link between food and mood, and particularly between caffeine and the body’s response to stress, it
seems sensible to examine what a nutritional perspective might add,” Jones said in a statement.
It may also be that people under stress and more susceptible to hallucinations are also more likely to consume
high levels of caffeine, Jones said in an interview. Caffeine is also contained in tea, chocolate, energy drinks,
and some foods.
“There would be no real reason for me to stop drinking tea,” said Jones. “I don’t see a reason to change a
moderate intake.”
Starbucks
The amount of caffeine linked to hallucinations in the study would also be equivalent to about seven 8-ounce
cups of brewed black tea or about 3 1/2 8-ounce cups of brewed black coffee, according to the Mayo Clinic
Web site. One 16-ounce Starbucks Corp. drip coffee also has 330 milligrams of caffeine, according to the
Starbucks Web site.
Starbucks spokeswoman Tara Darrow declined to comment in an email, saying the Seattle-based company was
aware of the research but hadn’t been able to review how it was conducted.
The U.K. researchers used surveys to assess daily caffeine intake and past experience with hallucinations.
Cigarette smokers, known to be more sensitive to caffeine, weren’t allowed to participate, and volunteers’
stress levels and proneness to hallucinatory experiences were taken into account.
Nine of the 22 people in the highest-caffeine group reported hearing disembodied voices, compared with three
of the 22 people in the lowest-caffeine group, Jones said. Participants also reported seeing things that weren’t
there and sensing the presence of dead people.

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