http://www.boston.com/yourlife/health/other/articles/2004/05/12/study_small_doses_of_caffeine_best_to_stay_awake/
Study: Small doses of caffeine best to stay awake
By Reuters | May 12, 2004
CHICAGO -- Small, frequent doses of caffeine are best for truck drivers,
doctors and others who need to stay awake over a long period of time, according
to a study published Tuesday.
The regular doses of caffeine build up to counteract the body's natural desire
for sleep and builds up the more one stays awake, the study said.
Small, frequent doses are more effective than a large jolt of caffeine in the
morning, which wears off just as the body begins to feel the need for sleep,
according to the study's lead author, James Wyatt.
"Most of the population is using caffeine the wrong way by drinking a few mugs
of coffee or tea in the morning, or three cups from their Starbucks grande on
the way to work," Wyatt, laboratory director of the Sleep Disorder Center at
Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, said in a news release.
"This means that caffeine levels in the brain will be falling as the day goes
on," he said. "Unfortunately, the physiological process they need to counteract
is not a major player until the latter half of the day."
That process is the system that builds up the appetite for sleep. Caffeine is
thought to block the receptor for adenosine, a critical chemical messenger
involved in the body's drive for sleep, the report said.
Researchers at Rush, along with others at Brigham and Women's Hospital in
Boston and Harvard Medical School, studied men in private suites who had no way
of knowing what time it was for 29 days.
The men were scheduled to stay awake nearly 29 hours straight, simulating the
amount of time some doctors, military and emergency services personnel have to
up.
Those who were given a caffeine pill every hour equivalent to the caffeine in
two ounces of coffee did better on tests than those who received an inert
placebo, the study said. The subjects who took the caffeine pill also felt
sleepier than the others when bedtime finally arrived, it said.
The research was published in the May issue of SLEEP, the journal of the
Associated Professional Sleep Societies.
"While there is no perfect substitute for sleep, our results point the way
toward a much better method for using caffeine in order to maintain optimal
vigilance and attention, particularly when someone has to remain awake longer
than the traditional 16-hour wake episode," Wyatt said.
=====
Jim Reisert AD1C, 7 Charlemont Court, North Chelmsford, MA 01863
USA +978-251-9933, <jjreisert@alum.mit.edu>, http://www.ad1c.com
PGP Fingerprint: D8E2 3D78 339F A7F1 8C13 1193 B5D1 4FB6 79D1 70DC
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