Your Brain on Frappuccino

fruitfly

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The U.S. government allocates many billions of dollars a year to the "War on Drugs," but it spends hardly a penny on the most insidious, most omnipresent psychoactive drug of all. I refer, of course, to caffeine (C8H10N4O2), the little alkaloid that made Starbucks' Howard Schultz a billionaire.

Drug? Indubitably: Even before it became endemic in the human diet through use in candy bars and soft drinks, doctors prescribed caffeine as a decongestant and mild painkiller; users discovered its efficacy as an appetite suppressant on their own. But it would be just another minor entry in the pharmacopeia were it not for another aspect: its powerful impact as a stimulant.

That's where the psychoactive aspect of caffeine kicks in. Unlike most small organic molecules, caffeine slips through cell walls as if they weren't there. An hour after your cuppa, caffeine's to be found in every cell in your body, including those of the nervous system; even the famed "blood-brain barrier" is impotent against its stealth attacks.

After more than a century of concentrated study, scientists are still not entirely sure what happens when caffeine hits the brain. The current best guess is that it plugs into receptors in cells that modulate "excitability," the propensity of neurons to fire, sending messages to other nerve circuits in the brain. Caffeine fits these receptors well enough to prevent their proper trigger (adenosine) from plugging in, but not well enough to mimic the downstream calming effect of adenosine. Result: The brain remains in a state of higher excitability, alertness, and clarity, not to mention irritability, than it would maintain without caffeine's intrusion.

So far, so good; everybody recognizes the energizing jolt a good cup of coffee delivers. (The size of the jolt depends on the mode of delivery: An espresso contains about a fifth of a gram of the stuff, drip coffee only half as much.) The trouble is that most of us users don't stop with one cup, and the spread of fancied-up ways of absorbing your jolt – lattes, Frappuccinos, and the like – has made it perilously easy to saturate the system with a drug that, its agreeable stimulation apart, is pretty hard on the nervous system.

Some people can't even handle that one espresso without experiencing feelings of anxiety. When the dosage rises above 600 milligrams (only about three shots' worth), a majority of imbibers experience side effects like nervousness and irritability; many also experience higher blood pressure without realizing it.

Even if your system is highly tolerant to caffeine, a gram a day can cause irregular heartbeat and ringing in the ears, not to mention insomnia, outbursts of temper, and heightened distractibility. Ten grams of it and you're dead. Granted, it's almost impossible to absorb 10 grams of caffeine by the usual methods, but it's still a little worrisome that the difference between a useful dose and a deadly one is a mere matter of 50 to one.

Another worrisome aspect of caffeine is that many of its users develop a tolerance to its effects – in others words, you start with a single short and eventually only a triple grande will do. This happens with most drugs that interfere with normal neurotransmitter pathways, which are linked in intricate loops of potentiation and feedback.

When we block adenosine from its target receptors, the nervous system tries to restore its balance by producing more adenosine to compete with the caffeine that's blocking it, so over time it takes more caffeine to overcome the additional adenosine's calming, soporific effect. No two people exhibit exactly the same pattern of tolerances, so there's no way to establish a "safe" dose except through trial and error, leaving plenty of room for the insomnia, heart flutters, and sour stomach that result from an "overdose."

Is caffeine a drug of abuse? Americans think of themselves as mighty coffee drinkers, but in fact they swallow less than half as much per capita (around one espresso's worth) as the Swedes or the Brits, who, counting tea and chocolate consumption along with coffee, are the current world champions, putting away nearly half a gram of caffeine a day on average.

On average – that's the problem with stats like these. There are a lot of people who don't drink coffee or tea at all, and averages don't help to discern how caffeine use differs by age, class, and income group. The most upsetting fact about caffeine is that there is virtually no good information about the impact of caffeine use on children and adolescents, who, thanks to soft drinks and chocolate-packed candies have become a major segment of the caffeine market. Kids' nervous systems are not completely developed until late adolescence, and nobody knows what effect on the final product a dozen-plus years of steady infusion of a powerful alkaloid stimulant may have.

On balance, Howard Schultz may be America's biggest pusher for adults, but one of these days it may turn out that Coke and Pepsi have a lot more to answer for.

Roger Downey is a senior editor at Seattle Weekly.
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Your Brain on Frappuccino
By Roger Downey, Seattle Weekly
Posted August 20, 2004

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Me too.
I swear I get "high" from drinking a bottle of Coca-Cola. I feel stimulated, but in a very negative way. Actually, to me all stimulatives are nasty, except MDMA.

Coffee may reduce my hunger for a couple of hours but then I get the feeling I've got a hole in my stomach (about 4 hours after drinking)

Caffeine is just so blah.
 
I dunno i still can't say "no" to a bowl pack of heady green and some coffee or a redbull in the morning.
coffee+weed=good shit
 
Caffeine is just evil to me. Not only does it make me feel like complete shit but it also makes me useless at most tastks.
 
I'm a long time caffeine addict. If I would have known about the dangeres of caffeine use, I probably would have curbed my use more. Back in high-school I used to ingest several grams of caffeine a day, and it has taken it's tole on my heart. Good article, but I dont see where you got your figures for caffeine content in esspresso vs. drip coffee...

From the faq (http://coffeefaq.com/caffaq.html)

'Drip 115-175mg (7oz)
Espresso 100mg (1.5-2oz)'

Note espresso has LESS caffeine then drip coffee, a common misconception. In fact, coffee that is really bitter as a general rule has less caffeine.
 
^ less per serving, not less mg/oz of course. I can't say I know many people that drink 7oz glasses of espresso though :)
 
yeah, I think caffeine sucks too. It makes me anxious unless I am very sleep deprived. Still, I think the author of the editorial is being slightly hyperbolic. Caffiene is one of the most insidious drugs precisely because it it is less dangerous than all of the classical addictive drugs (alcohol, tobacco, opiates, and dopaminergic stimulants i.e. cocaine and amphetamines). Obviously it is taking a long-term toll on the heart, but the toll is less than that of alcohol, tobacco, or dopaminergic stimulants (though more than opiates, which on their own do not cause cardiovascular damage). Is caffeine a drug of abuse? Well, it depends on what your definition of "abuse" is. If people always have their fix, then their productivity is not decreased significantly. . .of course, the same can be said of heroin addicts who can get maintenance doses prescribed to them as in the Netherlands or Switzerland.
 
This article is has technical inaccuracies. It is saying "adenosine" in place of epinephrine/adrenaline which is wrong, adenosine is one of the nitrogenous bases that makes up DNA.
 
Adenosine is present in dna, but it is also a neurotransmitter that modulates central and peripheral nervous activity. It's most commonly associated with sleep and calming of various bodily/mental functions.

I quit drinking caffeine also. I used to be hooked on rockstars to get me through work, then one night I drank four of them and practically panicked. Ever since then it makes me tired, irritable, and fucks my body up like hell.
 
Cafeine gets me more wired than cocaine, and even meth when my tolerance is up. I don't think I could hold down a job without it.
 
Gotta have my caffiene. When I have a big day of tests or papers to write its the only way I can make it.
 
And the wonderful combination of coffe and a smoke in the morning. A great way of cleaning out the system!! natures laxative...
 
A few years ago it was a daily routine of mine to down some mountain dews before school. But I've put that shit down for GOOD.

Caffeine sucks. I get all jittery and get the chills and have to piss a lot when I take it. Leaves me feeling all strung out and restless, even in the mornings.

And besdies that, I can't stand all the cliche starbucks fiends. If you really wanna jump start your morning do a line. Or just get a decent nights sleep and stop fucking yourself over.
 
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