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Friday 29 July 2016

8 Things You Didn’t Know Could Increase Your Sun Sensitivity

Most of us take precautions against sunburn when we spend time outside. But some things you might not consider can increase your sensitivity to the sun.
Watch out if you’re burning more quickly than in the past or developing new rashes, bumps, itching or pigment changes on your skin. This could mean you’re becoming more sensitive to sun exposure.
Always discuss these symptoms with your doctor to find out what’s going on. But you can stay aware of the following items to see if they might be causing sun sensitivity.
1. Drugs and Medications
Certain antihistamines, acne treatments, oral contraceptives, psychiatric drugs, antibiotics, heart medications, anti-inflammatories, diuretics and diabetic drugs have been shown toincrease your potential for sun sensitivity. This will often be listed as a precaution on the label of your medication. Check with your doctor or pharmacist if you have any questions about prescription drugs you’re taking.
2. Foods
Not many foods have been linked to sun sensitivity, but foods to watch out for include:
  • Celery
  • Dill
  • Citrus fruits and peels
  • Fennel
  • Parsley
  • Parsnips
  • Mustards
  • Artificial sweeteners
3. Perfumes
Commercial perfumes may cause photosensitivity, such as 6-methylcoumarine, rose bengal and musk scents. Keep in mind perfumes are not only used in personal scent products. They can also be found in products like lotions, soaps, laundry detergents, air fresheners and fabric softeners.
If you want to make sure you avoid perfumes, always choose unscented products.
4. Essential Oils
The chemical constituents found in some essential oils may lead to greater sensitivity to the sun when directly applied to your skin. These are known as phototoxic oils. The most common ones are:
  • Angelica
  • Anise
  • Bergamot
  • Bitter Orange
  • Caraway
  • Cedar
  • Cumin
  • Fennel
  • Ginger
  • Grapefruit
  • Lavender
  • Lemon
  • Lemon verbena
  • Lime
  • Marigold
  • Rue
5. Skin Care Products
Various compounds in personal care products that strip the outer layer of your skin will create greater photosensitivity.
Check your skin care products for ingredients like alpha-hydroxy acids (AHAs), beta-hydroxy acids (BHAs), salicyclic acid, benzoyl peroxide, glycolic acids, Retin-A and hydrocortisone.
Also be careful when you go to a spa or have a professional skin treatment. Cosmetic treatments such as microdermabrasion, chemical peels, laser treatments and exfoliating facial scrubs may also lead to greater skin sensitivity.
6. Herbs
Herbs can cause two different types of sun sensitivity. Photodermatitis, which is caused by touching the plant, or systemic photodermatitis when the plant is ingested.
Plants that may cause photodermatitis include:
  • Angelica seed or root (Angelica archangelica)
  • Arnica (Arnica montana)
  • Celery stems (Apium graveolens)
  • Rue (Rutae folium)
  • Lime oil or peels (Citrus aurantifolia)
Plants shown to cause potential problems when eaten are:
  • St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum)
  • Laceflower (Ammi majus)
  • Dong quai (Angelica sinensis)
  • Kava (Piper methysticum)
  • Yohimbe (Pausinystalia yohimbe)
7. Sunscreen
This may be the strangest one on the list, but some of the chemicals used in suncreens can actually make you more prone to burning. Check the label for benzophenones, dibenzoylmethane, oxybenzone, cyclohexanol, salicylates, cinnamate and PABA (para-aminobenzoic acid).
8. Nutrient Deficiency
Lack of some nutrients can make you more sensitive to sunlight. For instance, a niacin deficiency can lead to photosensitivity.
On the other hand, consuming healthy amounts of nutrients and antioxidants will help protect your skin. Beta-carotene, the nutrient that makes squash and carrots orange, has been shown to be especially beneficial for those with photodermatitis. Make sure to maintain a well-balanced diet or take a multivitamin regularly to ensure you’re getting a full complement of nutrients.
How to Protect Yourself from the Sun
Your first line of defense is to avoid any of these products if you’ve found they affect you. But there are other steps you can take as well, especially if you’ve been reacting to sun exposure.
Limit your time in the sun as much as possible. If you have to go out, try not to be in the sun for longer than 30 minutes at once.
Apply sunscreen that’s at least 30 SPF liberally 20 to 30 minutes before going outside. Then reapply it every 1 to 2 hours. Creams and lotions are recognized as having better protection than sprays.
Cover up with long sleeves, long pants and a hat if you don’t wear sunscreen. Or for extra protection, wear sunscreen under your clothing. You can buy specific clothing that is rated as sun protective, but any thick fabric with a tight weave will often provide adequate coverage.
Go outside in the early morning or later in the evening. The sun’s rays are strongest from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. In fact, 50 percent of the day’s ultraviolet (UV) radiation is emitted during this time. UV will also be stronger at higher elevations.
Also make sure to avoid any tanning devices, such as tanning lamps or beds.

How Many Glasses of Water Should We Drink a Day?

It turns out the often quoted “drink at least eight glasses of water a day” dictum has little underpinning scientific evidence. The recommendation was traced back to a 1921 paper, in which the author measured his own pee and sweat and determined we lose about 3% of our body weight in water a day, about eight cups. Consequently, for the longest time, water requirement guidelines for humanity were based on just one person.
There is evidence that not drinking enough may be associated with falls and fractures, heat stroke, heart disease, lung disorders, kidney disease, kidney stones, bladder and colon cancer, urinary tract infections, constipation, dry mouth, cavities, decreased immune function and cataract formation. The problem with many of these studies is that low water intake is associated with several unhealthy behaviors, such as low fruit and vegetable intake, more fast-food, and less shopping at farmers markets. And who drinks lots of water? People who exercise a lot. No wonder they have lower disease rates!
Only large and expensive randomized trials could settle these questions definitively. Given that water cannot be patented, such trials seem unlikely. Who’s going to pay for them? So we’re left with studies that find an association between disease and low water intake. But are people sick because they drink less or are they drinking less because they’re sick? There have been a few large prospective studies in which fluid intake is measured before disease develops. For example, a Harvard study of 48,000 men found that the risk of bladder cancer decreased by 7% for every extra daily cup of fluid one drinks. Therefore, a high intake of water—like eight cups a day—may reduce the risk of bladder cancer by about 50% (eight cups times 7% per cup), potentially saving thousands of lives.
Probably the best evidence we have for a cut off of water intake comes from theAdventist Health Study, in which 20,000 men and women were studied. About one-half were vegetarian, so they were also getting extra water by eating more fruits and vegetables. Those drinking five or more glasses of water a day had about half the risk of dying from heart disease compared to those who drank two or fewer glasses a day. Like the Harvard study, this protection was found after controlling for other factors such as diet and exercise. These data suggest that it was the water itself that was decreasing risk, perhaps by lowering blood viscosity (blood thickness).
Based on all the best evidence to date, authorities from Europe, the U.S. Institute of Medicine, and the World Health Organization recommend between 2.0 and 2.7 liters (8 to 11 cups) of water a day for women, and 2.5 to 3.7 liters (10 to 15 cups) a day for men. This includes water from all sources, not just beverages. We get about a liter from food and the water our body makes. So this translates into a recommendation for women to drink four to seven cups of water a day and men 6 to 11 cups, assuming only moderate physical activity at moderate ambient temperatures.
We can also get water from all the other drinks we consume, including caffeinated drinks, with the exception of stronger alcoholic drinks like wines and spirits. Beer can leave you with more water than you started with, but wine actively dehydrates you. However, in the cancer and heart disease studies I mentioned above, the benefits were only found with increased water consumption, not other beverages.

A Guide to Cutting Sugar Out of Your Diet

Let’s face it: we are seriously addicted to sugar.
Since the 1950s, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) informs us that our per capita consumption of sugars, like sucrose (table sugar) and high-fructose corn syrup, has increased 39 percent.
Each American consumes an average 152 pounds of sugar annually – the equivalent of 52 teaspoons of added sugars every day. That amount does not include naturally-occurring sugars found in fruit, vegetables, legumes and grains. While sugar manufacturers continue to feed off our addiction, claiming it is harmless—it’s not.
A Guide to Cutting Out Sugar
Here are some of the reasons why this highly-addictive white stuff is dangerous:
It has been linked to osteoporosis: In a study published in the medical journal Archives of Oral Biology, researchers found that sugar consumption caused osteoporosis andreduced bone strength in animals.
It has been linked to cancer: According to research in the medical journal Cancer Research, consumption of white sugar at levels comparable to the amount consumed in our Western diet led to increased breast cancer tumor growth and metastasis (movement of cancer throughout the body), when compared with a non-sugar starch diet.
It has been linked to more than other 100 conditions: According to Nancy Appleton’s research on sugar consumption in her classic work on the topic, Lick the Sugar Habit, sugar is linked to over 100 health symptoms or conditions, including: allergies, anxiety, depression, migraines, insomnia, infections, liver problems, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, heart disease, weight gain, diabetes and of course tooth decay.
Sugar takes many forms, from white table sugar (sucrose) to high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) or sometimes just fructose. There is maltose, dextrose and many other “-oses.” If sugar is listed on the nutritional label of the foods you select, look for ingredients ending in “ose.” In addition to the many reasons to avoid sugar, high fructose corn syrup presents its own unique problems. 
How to Cut Down on Sugar
Skip the soda: The fastest and most effective way to significantly cut your sugar consumption is to forego the soda. That’s because a single can of Coke contains 39 grams of sugar. Cutting just that one item out of your diet is a huge reduction in sugar.
Choose water or coconut water over sports drinks: Forget the artificially-colored and sugar-laden sports drinks that typically contain between 12 and 40 grams of sugar. Choose water or coconut water instead.
Don’t start the day with sugar: Breakfast is an essential meal, but it can be a sugar trap. Avoid muffins, granola bars, high-sugar yogurts, pastries or cereals. Check the nutrition label on any packaged breakfast item. And watch the serving size since many companies sneakily use extra small serving sizes to make their products appear nutritionally better than they really are. The typical muffin has about 20 grams of sugar. Compare that to 1 gram of sugar in one-half cup of plain, cooked oatmeal. If you need something sweet, add a spoonful of fresh or frozen blueberries.
Switch your latte to a regular coffee or tea (sweetened with stevia if needed) and you’ll save more than 40 grams of sugar every day. That’s because many beverages like the Starbucks Chai Latte contains 42 grams of sugar in a single, 16-ounce beverage. And the White Chocolate Mocha has 59 grams of sugar in a single, 16-ounce beverage.
Switch to the herb stevia: Keep a small bottle of stevia in your purse or pocket. Stevia is a naturally sweet herb that doesn’t contain any sugar. Use a few drops or a tiny amount of the powder in place of sugar in your coffee or tea and you’ll reduce your sugar intake by 4 grams for every teaspoon of sugar you normally take. That adds up over the course of a year. Pay attention to labels as many stevia manufacturers hide unwanted sugars and other additives in their stevia products.
Go Greek: Switch from flavored yogurt to plain Greek yogurt and you’ll save about 20 grams of sugar daily. That’s because most 6 ounce servings of yogurt contain 20 to 26 grams of sugar. 
Scrap the Hidden Sugars: Sugar is hidden in many surprising places, including: bread coatings, hamburgers, canned fish, packaged meat and poultry, salt (shocking but true), luncheon meats, bacon, canned meat, bouillon cubes (and therefore soup), peanut butter, cereals, ketchup, cranberry sauce and other condiments. These hidden sugars add up every day and every year.

How to Kick Cravings for Good
When you eat sugar, you end up craving more thanks to the spikes and surges in blood sugar levels. By satisfying cravings or low blood sugar levels (such as those in hypoglycemia) with sugar, you set yourself up for a blood sugar and energy crash an hour or two later. And, of course, that crash means more cravings. Choosing healthier options that regulate blood sugar levels helps to nix cravings for good. Here are some simple ways to help give your cravings the boot:
-Snack on nuts or seeds between meals since they are high in healthy fats, fiber and protein, all of which help keep blood sugar levels stable. That translates into fewer sugar cravings. Choose raw, unsalted sunflower or pumpkin seeds, or walnuts, almonds or other favorite nuts.
-Drink water before satisfying any sugar craving. Many of my clients over the years have found that this simple trick often halts a craving in its tracks.
-Spice up meals with saffron: Research in the medical journal Nutrition Researchfound that an extract of the spice saffron (Crocus sativus) reduces snacking and increases the feeling of being full, thereby reducing cravings. Study participants used 176.5 mg of saffron extract daily. Follow package instructions for products you select.
-Power up with protein: Because protein foods tend to break down slowly, they gradually release energy to the body as needed, keeping blood sugar levels stable. Keep in mind that protein does not equate with meat, contrary to popular belief. There are many excellent vegan protein foods, including: chickpeas, lentils, kidney beans, pinto beans, cashews, almonds, walnuts, pecans, avocados, quinoa and many others.
-Monitor your  chromium levels: Many people are deficient in the mineral chromium, which helps to balance blood sugar levels, mood swings and weight gain. Chromium is naturally found in many whole grains, romaine lettuce, onions, beans, legumes and ripe tomatoes, but supplementing with 200 to 500 micrograms of chromium daily may be needed to reduce cravings.
-Switch to Fruit: Grab a piece of your favorite fruit whenever you crave sugar. While fruit contains natural sugars, it also contains other nutrients that help boost your health and keep you full.

The Unexpected Health Benefits of Saffron

When was the last time you added saffron to a dish? It turns out this infrequently used spice is well worth seeking out for its health benefits.
Saffron is the dried female stamens of the plant Crocus sativus, native to the Mediterranean. The stamens can only be harvested from the individual flowers by hand, and it takes up to 75,000 flowers to produce one pound of saffron.
It’s no wonder saffron is one of the most expensive spices in the world. Despite being difficult to obtain, saffron has been prized as a spice, medicine and dye for thousands of years. In fact, there are 50,000-year-old prehistoric depictions in Iran that contain saffron-based pigments.
Saffron is also nutritious, containing manganese, vitamin C, magnesium, potassium, vitamin B6 and iron.
This unique spice is linked to many different health benefits. These are some of the main findings.
Weight Loss
French study found an extract of saffron was able to help control snacking and improve weight loss in a group of mildly overweight, healthy women. The participants who ate a saffron extract for 8 weeks snacked less frequently and had a greater body weight reduction than those who didn’t.
The researchers felt the saffron extract creates a greater feeling of fullness when food is eaten, which leads to less of a compulsion to snack.
Alzheimer’s Disease 
Saffron was shown to help with Alzheimer’s treatment in two Iranian studies. Both studies gave patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease 15 milligram capsules of saffron twice daily.
In the first study, those who took saffron for 16 weeks had significantly better cognitive function than those who did not. In the second study, the saffron patients were compared to those taking donepezil, a common drug used in Alzheimer’s treatment. After 22 weeks, researchers concluded saffron was equally as effective as the donepezil. And the saffron did not cause vomiting or other unpleasant side effects.
Aphrodisiac
Researchers at the University of Guelph reviewed hundreds of studies on natural aphrodisiacs. They measured these against strict standards for psychological and physiological sexual enhancement to determine which substances were truly effective.
Only three items conclusively improved human sexual function:
  • Saffron
  • Ginseng (Panax ginseng)
  • Vohimbine (a compound from vohimbe trees in West Africa)
Interestingly, wine and chocolate were not proven to be effective aphrodisiacs. You should try reaching for saffron instead when you’re looking for a pick-me-up.
Depression
Many clinical trials have shown saffron can be an effective treatment for mild to moderate depression, as well as major depressive disorder. A 2007 study found that even the petals of saffron had the same effect as the medication Prozac on patients with depression, with 25 percent of people going into remission.
Menstrual Disorders
Saffron has traditionally been used to treat various issues around menstruation, and research is now backing it up. Saffron supplements were found to significantly reduce the symptoms of premenstrual syndrome (PMS). This included an improvement in mood and behavior and a reduction in symptoms like cramps, tender breasts and food cravings.
Another study revealed that merely the smell of saffron was beneficial for PMS, dysmenorrhea (painful menstrual cramps) and irregular menstruation. Considering the cost of saffron, it’s significant that simply sniffing the herb may help treat menstrual issues.
Cardiovascular Diseases
Saffron has been shown to have a protective effect against heart attacks. After 8 days of receiving a saffron extract, rats were shown to have better oxidation in their heart tissue and the ability to handle biological stress compared to non-supplemented rats.
Chinese study also found that a 10-day treatment with crocin, a compound in saffron, significantly reduced levels of harmful fats in the blood, including triglycerides and cholesterol. Crocin appears to block the absorption of these fats.
Cancer
It’s been proven that saffron has significant cancer prevention properties, including the ability to fight free radicals and promote cell death in tumors. Evidence shows that saffron has the potential to be used in the treatment of gastric, colorectal, liver, pancreatic, prostate, breast, skin and lung cancers.
Suggestions for Using Saffron
You can find saffron as a powdered supplement capsule, a liquid extract or simply the spice itself.
When buying the spice, make sure you’re getting a genuine product. Many fake or adulterated saffron products are on the market. To tell if your saffron is the real deal, immerse a tiny piece in warm water or milk. If the liquid colors immediately, you have a fake on your hands. Authentic saffron takes about 10 to 15 minutes of soaking before it changes the color of the water.
If you choose to take saffron as a supplement, check with your doctor first to make sure it’s compatible with any current treatments.

It’s Time to Ditch Canola Oil

Look at any packaged food in the grocery store and you’ll probably find canola, vegetable, soybean, corn or rapeseed oil somewhere on the ingredients list. In fact, many modern baking recipes, like pancakes, cakes and brownies, call for vegetable oils like canola. And why not? It’s a cheap, widely available, healthy oil, right? Wrong. While canola oil has long been considered the heart healthy, naturally neutral-flavored oil of choice for Americans, it is anything but. Let’s take a look at what’s so bad about canola oil:
It is not a whole food.
To make canola oil, rapeseeds are squeezed, bathed in a chemical solvent, washed in lye, separated in a vat using centrifugal forces and bleached to neutralize the unpleasant odor. So no, canola oil is by no means a whole food. It is a very highly processed, highly refined oil product. In fact, although canola oil is widely praised as being odorless and flavorless, the natural oil of the rapeseed is not flavorless and odorless by nature—that is the result of the immense chemical processing it must undergo. 
It is inflammatory.
Canola oil is not a good source of omega-3 fatty acids. In fact, it contributes to omega-3 imbalances. As you may know, many of us consume far too many omega-6 fatty acids and far too few omega-3s. When the see-saw of omega fatty acids is too heavy on omega-6s, they overrun the body and become inflammatory. In fact, the inflammatory action of too many omega 6s is actually associated with all inflammatory disease,according to Chris Kresser. Many people believe that because canola oil is low in saturated fat, it must be heart healthy. While hopefully you know that saturated fats have been falsely demonized for years, the inflammatory action of this refined oil product is actually significantly more harmful than a wholesome, natural fat like grass-fed butter or coconut oil.
It is not heat stable.
According to Lauren Geertsen, NTP, canola oil is 28 percent polyunsaturated fat, 63 percent monounsaturated fat and only 7 percent saturated fat. While saturated fats are fairly heat stable, polyunsaturated fats are extremely unstable and will oxidize and go rancid when subjected to heat, rendering them nutritionally useless and inflammatory. Monounsaturates lie somewhere in the middle, tolerating  small amount of heat. With its ratios, canola oil, along with all other vegetable oils, are not stable for heat. When you cook with canola, you are taking an already inflammatory oil and making it more inflammatory by bringing it past its low smoke point.
It is often riddled with GMOs.
Ninety percent of the canola grown in the U.S. is genetically modified. This also means that canola is riddled with pesticides. If for no other reason, it is smart to ditch canola oil to reduce the toxic load on both you and the environment.
Cheap vegetable oils like canola do not deserve a place in your pantry. What oils are better? Both coconut oil and ghee are extremely heat stable for cooking. For drizzling or low heat, extra virgin olive oil and avocado oil are excellent choices. If you’re just drizzling raw oil on finished dishes or salads, try cold-pressed walnut oil or flax oil.
Years ago, popcorn fiend that I am, I used to make stovetop popcorn in canola oil and I would always feel gross and greasy after I ate the bowl. When I switched over to using coconut oil, not only did the popcorn become less smoky and tastier, but I actually felt nourished and terrific afterward. The same goes for anything cooked at high heat. Choosing an oil that remains stable is essential for health and flavor. Not all oils are created equal.

Monday 25 July 2016

The Truth About Caffeine Withdrawals

“I think my interest in it is deeply psychological,” says Catherine Manzanares, Thrive Market’s Content Marketing Manager. “I use it as an excuse to wake up.”
What about quitting? “Never tried. Probably won’t,” she replied.
She’s talking about coffee, the stimulant that fuels so many of our mornings.
Manzanares isn’t alone. This sentiment was echoed by several people when asked about their relationship with caffeine (or its popular carrier, coffee). Jill Russell, Thrive Market’s Executive Editor, said she quit drinking coffee at the advice of a doctor because she struggled with intermittent insomnia. It didn’t help, so after about a month, she went back to it.
Caffeine, one of the world’s most popular (if not benign) drugs of choice, is found in numerous plants. The most widely consumed are coffee, tea, cola nut, cocoa pod, guarana, and maté. It is estimated that between 80 and 90 percent of North American adults and children habitually consume caffeine. Among adults in the United States, coffee is the leading source of caffeine. For kids, it’s soft drinks.
While caffeine is often built into a routine or ritual that seems relatively harmless, it can be addictive. Thus, when someone misses out on their daily fix, they experience what any addict would: withdrawal.
What does caffeine do to the brain?
The stimulant effect of coffee comes from the way it acts on the adenosine receptors in the neural membrane. Adenosine is a central nervous system neuromodulator with specific receptors. When adenosine binds to its receptors, neural activity slows down, and you feel sleepy.
Caffeine acts as an adenosine-receptor antagonist. This means that it binds to these same receptors, but without reducing neural activity. By essentially blocking the adenosine from slowing neural activity, caffeine keeps you feeling stimulated rather than tired.
Caffeine also causes the pituitary gland to secrete hormones, which in turn prompts the adrenal glands to produce more adrenaline. Adrenaline, otherwise known as the “fight or flight” hormone, helps you focus and gives your system an extra blast of energy—exactly the effects many coffee drinkers want.
Lastly, like most drugs, caffeine increases the production of dopamine in the brain’s pleasure circuits, thus fueling your dependency on it.
The health benefits of coffee drinking
While reports on the matter do tend to oscillate between coffee being good for you and something to avoid, it can’t be denied that recent studies have uncovered there are associated health benefits.
One study found that women who drink coffee regularly may lower their risk of depression. Additionally, research points to a decreased risk of stroke in women—though only moderately. Finally, there is more evidence still that suggests it reduces the risk of Type 2 diabetes. 
As for enhancing cognitive function, or mood, it depends on the person—not everyone metabolizes caffeine the same way.
About caffeine withdrawal
Back in 2013, caffeine intoxication and withdrawal became official mental disorders in the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, commonly referred to as the DSM-5.
“Caffeine intoxication and withdrawal both occur fairly frequently but only rarely cause enough clinically significant impairment to be considered a mental disorder,” Allen Frances, who chaired the task force that developed the previous volume of DSM, told the Wall Street Journal.
While Frances was a vocal critic of medicalizing every aspect of life and turning “everyone into a patient,” others felt it was valid. Alan Budney, a member of the DSM-5 Substance-Related Disorders Work Group, told the WSJ that the research in support of caffeine intoxication and withdrawal as a diagnosis is substantial—and that it could be useful to psychiatrists and other healthcare professionals seeing patients with those symptoms.
To be officially diagnosed with caffeine withdrawal, a patient has to experience at least three out of five symptoms within 24 hours of stopping or reducing caffeine intake:
  • Headache
  • Fatigue
  • Sleepiness/drowsiness
  • Difficulty concentrating
  • Difficulty working
  • Irritability
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Flu-like symptoms
  • Impairment in psychomotor, vigilance, and cognitive performances
These may sound familiar to anyone who’s tried to go cold turkey on their morning brew—but it’s only when it causes “clinically significant distress or impairment” that affects your functioning at work, home, or in a social setting that it’s a bigger cause for concern.
Withdrawal symptoms usually start to show about 12 hours after consumption, peaking at 24 hours. For most, it takes about a week for symptoms to disappear completely.
Of the Thrive Market employees interviewed, those who tried to quit coffee did notice that they experienced headaches for the first day or two—though they generally subsided after that. According to one study, about 50 percent of people who abstain from drinking caffeine for 24 hours report getting a headache.
When signs or symptoms of caffeine withdrawal occur, the severity can vary from mild to extreme. At its worst, caffeine withdrawal has been repeatedly documented to produce clinically significant distress or impairment in daily functioning. On rare occasions, it’s totally incapacitating. For example, in a double-blind caffeine-withdrawal evaluation at John Hopkins Medicine, 73 percent of individuals who met criteria for DSM-5 substance dependence on caffeine reported functional impairment in normal activities (like skipping an exercise routine, missing work, or losing patience with their kids) during an experimental withdrawal phase.
Can someone overdose on caffeine?
Like with any other drug, technically, you can overdose on caffeine. Though it’s very rare, a brief hospital stay may be necessary to complete treatment. In severe cases, death can even result from convulsions or an irregular heartbeat.
Symptoms of caffeine overdose in adults may include:
  • Breathing trouble
  • Changes in alertness
  • Confusion
  • Convulsions
  • Diarrhea
  • Dizziness
  • Fever
  • Hallucinations
  • Increased thirst
  • Increased urination
  • Irregular heartbeat
  • Muscle twitching
  • Rapid heartbeat
  • Sleeping trouble
  • Vomiting
Symptoms in children may include:
  • Muscles that are very tense, then very relaxed
  • Nausea
  • Rapid, deep breathing
  • Rapid heartbeat
  • Shock
  • Tremors
  • Vomiting
So why quit caffeine?
When asking people who love coffee about their relationship with it, there are a range of responses: it’s everything from “a treat” to “an everyday indulgence.” One extreme coffee-drinker said “most of my personality is tied to [it].” Rarely do people associate caffeine addiction with any serious cause for concern—and many willingly admit they’re addicted. So what’s the big deal?
Aside from intoxication or withdrawal, there are other aspects to consider when using caffeine as a main source of energy. Additionally, it’s advised that certain people should avoid caffeinated products, such as those with anxiety, high blood pressure, insomnia, and diabetes. People who experience adverse effects from caffeine, such as the jitters typically associated with caffeine intoxication, may want to consider at least scaling back their consumption.
In an article for the Huffington Post, Dr. Mark Hyman wrote about his own experiences with caffeine. “I traded sleep for espresso, authentic energy for Häagen-Dazs coffee ice cream, and normal circadian rhythms for high-speed, caffeinated adrenaline rushes.
“But then, my body began to communicate to me what I had been attempting to not hear—slow down and let the natural systems assume their proper course.”
In addition to those mentioned above, Hyman told Huffington Post, “if you or someone you care about is sick, inflamed, hormonally imbalanced, nutritionally compromised, overworked, stressed out, fatigued, depressed or toxic—coffee is not part of the medicine required for your healing.”
In the article, he cites 10 reasons for reducing, or eliminating coffee from your diet, including:
  • Caffeine increases catecholamines, your stress hormones. This elicits cortisol and increases insulin, which can cause inflammation.
  • Habitual caffeine drinking decreases insulin sensitivity, which can make it difficult for cells to respond appropriately to blood sugar. High blood sugar levels lead to arterial deterioration and cardiovascular risks.
  • Diterpenes in unfiltered coffee have been linked to higher levels of triglycerides, LDL, and VLDL levels.
  • The helpful chlorogenic acids that may delay glucose absorption in the intestine have also been shown to increase homocysteine levels—an indicator for increased risk of cardiovascular disease.
  • Coffee’s acidity is linked to digestive discomfort, indigestion, heartburn, GERD and dysbiosis (imbalances in the gut flora).
  • Coffee “addicts” aren’t relying on the body’s natural source of energy.
  • There’s a cultural addiction to coffee and its associations—those sugary, fatty drinks that are more of a meal than a drink. A morning latte epitomizes food packed with energy yet lacking any nutritional value.
  • 5-HIA, an organic acid and component of the neurotransmitter serotonin, tends to be elevated in coffee drinkers. This can be disruptive to sleep patterns and promote anxiety and even depression.
  • Coffee can interfere with the detoxification process in the liver.
It gives you pause before pouring another cup, or getting a refill on that soda.
How to avoid withdrawal symptoms
Hyman suggests slowly weaning yourself off of coffee to avoid extreme withdrawal.
To avoid crashing or feeling the effects of caffeine withdrawal, he offers these tips:
  • Drink a lot of water, at least 8 glasses a day. It’s the best way to flush out the system.
  • Eat clean foods (high-fiber diets with plenty of vegetables will give you clean bowels).
  • Allow more time for sleep.
  • Take 1,000 mg of vitamin C with breakfast and dinner.
  • Exercise daily to combat fatigue.
  • Avoid low blood sugar by eating when you’re hungry, rather than substituting real food for coffee or a caffeinated beverage to give you energy.
  • Drink green tea instead. It has antioxidants, but is also caffeinated.
Even if you decide quitting completely may not be the best choice for you, cutting back may be the answer. Roland Griffiths, a professor in the department of psychiatry and neuroscience at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, told the Wall Street Journal that the best way to get caffeine to “work” is to drink it at irregular intervals—like once a week—and limiting your intake to as little as 100 milligrams in a day (about ¼ of a cup).
A simple way to get more energy
So if you can’t get that pep in your step from caffeine, what are the alternatives? Dr. Hyman offers a solution to get a grasp of what raises and lowers your personal energy levels.
He suggests making a list with two columns. In the first column, list all of the things that give you energy. In the second column, list everything that drains your energy. Each day try to let go of one thing that drains you, and add one thing that energizes you.
Then of course, there are other alternatives to try if you like the warmth or flavor. Thisdecaf dandelion cacao latte actually mimics the flavor of coffee.