Coffee Linked to Lower Dementia Risk
Drinking coffee may do more than just keep you awake. - By NICHOLAS BAKALAR
1/24/2009
Drinking coffee may do more than just keep you awake. A new study suggests an intriguing
potential link to mental health later in life, as well.
A team of Swedish and Danish researchers tracked coffee consumption in a group of 1,409
middle-age men and women for an average of 21 years. During that time, 61 participants
developed dementia, 48 with Alzheimer’s disease.
After controlling for numerous socioeconomic and health factors, including high cholesterol and
high blood pressure, the scientists found that the subjects who had reported drinking three to five
cups of coffee daily were 65 percent less likely to have developed dementia, compared with those
who drank two cups or less. People who drank more than five cups a day also were at reduced risk
of dementia, the researchers said, but there were not enough people in this group to draw
statistically significant conclusions.
Dr. Miia Kivipelto, an associate professor of neurology at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm
and lead author of the study, does not as yet advocate drinking coffee as a preventive health
measure. “This is an observational study,” she said. “We have no evidence that for people who are
not drinking coffee, taking up drinking will have a protective effect.”
Dr. Kivipelto and her colleagues suggest several possibilities for why coffee might reduce the risk
of dementia later in life. First, earlier studies have linked coffee consumption with a decreased
risk of type 2 diabetes, which in turn has been associated with a greater risk of dementia. In
animal studies, caffeine has been shown to reduce the formation of amyloid plaques in the brain,
one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease. Finally, coffee may have an antioxidant effect in the
bloodstream, reducing vascular risk factors for dementia.
Dr. Kivipelto noted that previous studies have shown that coffee drinking may also be linked to a
reduced risk of Parkinson’s disease.
The new study, published this month in The Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, is unusual in that
more than 70 percent of the original group of 2,000 people randomly selected for tracking were
available for re-examination 21 years later. The dietary information had been collected at the
beginning of the study, which reduced the possibility of errors introduced by people inaccurately
recalling their consumption. Still, the authors acknowledge that any self-reported data is subject
to inaccuracies.
Coffee Linked to Lower Dementia Risk - NYTimes.com 1/25/09 8:31 AM
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to inaccuracies.

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